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UK Medicine · 2027 Entry

California Health Sciences University COM (DO) Medicine InterviewFormat, Questions & Prep Tips

Interview September through FebruaryDecisions Rolling decisions, typically 4–8 weeks post-interview
Overview

California Health Sciences University College of Osteopathic Medicine (CHSU COM) uses a **traditional interview format** — faculty sessions at its Clovis, California campus in the San Joaquin Valley.

AACOMAS is the primary application service. CASPer is **not currently required** (verify for current cycle).

The San Joaquin Valley is one of the most medically underserved regions in the United States — and one of the most distinctive training environments. The Valley is California’s agricultural heartland, home to a predominantly Hispanic farmworker population, severe air quality crises (some of the worst particulate matter levels in the nation), and a critical shortage of primary care physicians. CHSU COM was founded specifically to address these disparities, and every interview question is essentially asking the same thing: *are you genuinely committed to this valley and these communities?*

Key facts

Key Facts at a Glance

Annual DO class size
~120
Interview format
Traditional — faculty session
CASPer required
Not currently required (verify)
Application system
AACOMAS primary + CHSU secondary
Tuition (2025–26)
~USD 54,000/year (estimated)
Interview window
September–February
Format

Interview Format

  • Traditional faculty interview; approximately 30–45 minutes.
  • Valley-specific mission questions are central.
  • No MMI.
Questions

Sample Interview Questions

motivation

The San Joaquin Valley has some of the worst air quality in the United States and a critical shortage of primary care physicians. Why do you want to train and potentially practice in this environment?

Know the Valley's specific health challenges: air quality index data, asthma and COPD rates, farmworker pesticide exposure, cardiovascular disease, and the physician shortage. Connect to a genuine personal motivation.

motivation

Farmworker health is one of the distinctive patient populations in the San Joaquin Valley. What do you know about the health challenges facing agricultural workers in California?

Pesticide exposure (organophosphates, cholinesterase inhibition), heat illness, musculoskeletal injuries, limited health insurance access (many are not US citizens), housing instability, and migrant health patterns.

motivation

Why osteopathic medicine rather than an MD programme, and how does OMM connect to the musculoskeletal and occupational health challenges you will see at CHSU COM?

Musculoskeletal OMT (back pain, repetitive strain) is directly relevant to farmworker and agricultural health. Show you can connect OMM to real patient populations, not just recite philosophy.

ethics

An undocumented farmworker presents with pesticide exposure symptoms. He is afraid his employer will find out he sought care. How do you approach his care?

Confidentiality, EMTALA, occupational health reporting requirements, patient trust in under-documented communities, and the physician's dual obligations to patient and public health.

motivation

Describe any experience you have had providing healthcare or services to Hispanic, farmworker, or agricultural communities.

Authenticity and specificity. If you have no experience with this specific population, acknowledge it directly and demonstrate genuine curiosity and humility about what you will need to learn.

motivation

Clovis is a suburban city outside Fresno in the San Joaquin Valley. What do you know about Fresno County's health profile?

Research Fresno County: high rates of childhood asthma, one of the highest poverty rates among California counties, cardiovascular disease burden, maternal health disparities, and primary care access gaps.

ethics

California has expanded Medi-Cal significantly, yet the San Joaquin Valley still has major health disparities. Why does insurance expansion alone not solve the access problem?

Physician shortage even with insurance, transportation barriers in rural areas, undocumented population not covered by Medi-Cal, cultural and language barriers, shortage of Spanish-speaking providers.

communication

You are seeing a Spanish-speaking farmworker patient with limited English and you do not speak Spanish. How do you conduct the visit?

Professional medical interpretation, telephone or video interpretation services, the LEAP (Listen, Explain, Acknowledge, Participate) framework for cross-language encounters.

communication

In a resource-limited Valley clinic, you work alongside a community health worker who has been serving this community for 20 years. How do you approach that relationship?

Deep respect for community knowledge, collaborative care model, the community health worker as cultural bridge and trusted advocate.

motivation

What is something about the San Joaquin Valley's health challenges that you find genuinely surprising or that changed your thinking?

Shows you have done real research and engaged intellectually with the Valley's context. Avoid generic answers — identify something specific that surprised you.

data

Fresno County has some of the worst air quality and highest childhood asthma rates in the country. How would you think about measuring whether a Valley clinic is effectively managing asthma in its paediatric population?

Population-health framing: controller-medication adherence, asthma-action-plan completion, ED visits and hospitalisations as outcome measures, and the role of environmental triggers (air quality, agricultural exposures, housing). Keep figures conceptual.

role-play

A Spanish-preferring farmworker comes in with chronic low back pain and worries that taking time off will cost him his job. Show me how you'd conduct this visit, including how OMT might fit.

Demonstrate the encounter via interpreter: validate his constraints, explain options including in-office OMT for musculoskeletal pain, avoid reflexive opioid prescribing, and build a plan that respects his work and economic reality.

academic

CHSU students must master OMM alongside a heavy preclinical load and then prepare for COMLEX-USA. What is your concrete study strategy, and how would you keep OMT skills sharp through preclinical years?

Spaced repetition, active recall, a board-preparation timeline, and deliberate hands-on OMT practice. Show you understand COMLEX-USA tests osteopathic principles distinctively, not just the same content as the MCAT-era sciences.

ethics

You suspect a farmworker patient's symptoms stem from unsafe pesticide exposure at work, but he begs you not to report anything because he fears losing his job and is undocumented. How do you weigh your obligations?

Patient confidentiality and trust, occupational-health and public-health reporting frameworks, the physician's dual obligations, and how to protect the patient while not ignoring a hazard that may endanger co-workers — handled with humility about his vulnerability.

communication

You are working with a community health worker who has served Valley farmworker families for twenty years and gently tells you a patient did not understand your instructions. How do you respond in the moment?

Receiving feedback from a trusted community expert without defensiveness, adapting your explanation immediately, and treating the community health worker's cultural knowledge as authoritative.

Prepare

How to Prepare

01

Research San Joaquin Valley health statistics: air quality data, farmworker population health, Fresno County health profile.

02

Understand farmworker health: pesticide exposure, heat illness, musculoskeletal injuries, access barriers.

03

Spanish language ability is a significant differentiator but not required.

04

Connect OMM/OMT to musculoskeletal and occupational health conditions common in the Valley.

05

Submit AACOMAS early; rolling admissions reward timely applications.

06

Be ready to discuss OMT concretely for the musculoskeletal and occupational complaints common among farmworkers, including as a non-opioid option for back pain.

07

Prepare an example of receiving feedback from a non-physician community expert — community health workers are central to Valley care and CHSU values humility toward them.

Pitfalls

Common Pitfalls

Generic "rural California" or "underserved" answers without Valley-specific knowledge.
No experience with agricultural, farmworker, or Hispanic health populations.
Inability to discuss OMT in relation to the specific occupational health challenges of the Valley.
Treating the Valley location as a drawback rather than a distinctive training advantage.
Framing pesticide exposure, heat illness, or farmworker health in abstract terms without showing you grasp the lived constraints (job insecurity, immigration status) that shape whether patients can act on your advice.
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

CHSU COM does not currently require CASPer. Verify on CHSU's official admissions page for the current cycle.

Yes — CHSU COM holds COCA accreditation. Verify current status on the COCA website.

Spanish is not required but is highly valued given the predominantly Spanish-speaking patient population in the San Joaquin Valley. Medical interpretation services are available for clinical encounters.

CHSU COM is a private school, but its mission is explicitly to address San Joaquin Valley health disparities, so genuine commitment to serving the Valley and similar underserved communities is viewed very favourably. Confirm any regional considerations with admissions.

Rotations occur across affiliated hospitals and community sites in the Central Valley and beyond. Confirm the current clinical affiliate network with admissions, as it continues to develop for this relatively young programme.

Spanish is not required, but it is a meaningful asset given the predominantly Spanish-speaking farmworker population. Professional medical interpretation is available for clinical encounters, and cultural humility matters as much as language ability.
Guides

Related guides

Free, evidence-based guides from current UK medical and dental students.

Sources & official admissions information

We cross-check every interview guide against the school's own admissions guidance and the UK regulators.

  1. California Health Sciences University COM (DO) — official admissions pageProgramme overview, entry requirements, interview format and timeline straight from the school.
  2. UCAT ConsortiumOfficial UCAT registration, test format, scoring methodology and free practice materials.
  3. General Medical Council (GMC) — approved UK medical schoolsStatutory regulator. Approved medical schools, the registered-doctor register, and fitness-to-practise standards.
  4. Medical Schools CouncilSelecting-for-excellence guidance, MMI principles, and an A–Z of UK medical schools.

Ready to nail your California Health Sciences University COM (DO) interview?

Book a mock interview with a current medical student who recently went through the same process.

California Health Sciences University COM (DO) Medicine Interview — Format, Questions & Prep Tips | NGMP