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UK Medicine · 2027 Entry

Geisinger Commonwealth School of Medicine (MD) Medicine InterviewFormat, Questions & Prep Tips

Interview October through February; rolling invitations following secondary and CASPer reviewDecisions Rolling decisions; final decisions by March 30
Overview

Geisinger Commonwealth School of Medicine uses a **Multiple Mini Interview (MMI)** format — 8 stations of approximately 8 minutes each with 2-minute preparation windows. The MMI is held in Scranton, Pennsylvania.

Geisinger Commonwealth is uniquely integrated with the **Geisinger Health System**, one of the US’s most prominent integrated health organisations and the originator of the ProvenCare value-based care model. Interviewers probe whether applicants genuinely understand health-systems science and want to be trained within a model integrated health system — not just conventional clinical medicine.

**CASPer is required** as a pre-interview component. Applicants should treat CASPer preparation as part of the Geisinger application strategy, not an afterthought. The school assesses candidates across all four AAMC Core Competency domains with particular emphasis on service orientation, community health commitment, and Interpersonal skills.

Key facts

Key Facts at a Glance

Annual MD class size
~90
Applications received
~5,000–7,000 per cycle
Interview format
MMI — 8 stations, ~8 min each
CASPer required
Yes — required pre-interview
Curriculum
Integrated MD with health systems science thread
Tuition (2025–26)
~USD 62,000/year
Application system
AMCAS + Geisinger secondary + CASPer
Interview window
October–February
Format

Interview Format

  • 8 MMI stations; each approximately 8 minutes with a 2-minute preparation window.
  • Stations span ethical scenarios, role-play, community health policy, collaborative tasks, and reflective prompts.
  • Assessors include Geisinger faculty, standardised patients, and community representatives.
  • Full day includes Geisinger Health System information session, campus tour, and informal student lunch.
  • In-person format in Scranton; station assessors do not see your file.
Questions

Sample Interview Questions

motivation

Geisinger is known for the ProvenCare model — evidence-based care bundles with guaranteed outcomes. What does training within that model mean for how you will practise medicine?

Understand ProvenCare: bundled payments, standardised care pathways, outcomes guarantees, and the implications for clinical autonomy vs. standardisation. Show genuine engagement with health systems thinking.

ethics

A rural Pennsylvania patient must drive 45 minutes to the nearest specialist. Telehealth could solve the access problem but the patient's insurance does not cover it. What do you do?

Telehealth reimbursement gaps post-COVID, rural access as a structural equity issue, the physician's role in documenting medical necessity, advocacy for policy change, and pragmatic workarounds.

communication

[Role-play] A patient has just been told they need surgery. They are clearly frightened and asking you to explain what will happen. The surgeon is very busy and asked you to "handle it." You have 8 minutes.

Informed consent process, empathic communication, honest scope of your role (do not overpromise), and flagging the patient's emotional state back to the surgeon.

ethics

Geisinger has implemented genetic screening programmes that identify disease risk before symptoms appear. A patient's genomic result shows high risk for an untreatable condition. Should they be told?

Predictive genomics ethics: duty to disclose vs. right not to know, psychological impact, family implications, life insurance discrimination, and GINA protections.

motivation

Why Scranton and Northeast Pennsylvania — what draws you to a school embedded in a rural and semi-rural community rather than a major urban academic centre?

Northeast PA demographics: working-class post-industrial communities, Appalachian fringe, aging population, opioid crisis. Be specific about what rural/community-embedded training offers that a major urban centre does not.

ethics

A hospital system administrator asks physicians to reduce average length of stay to improve profitability metrics. You believe several patients are being discharged before they are ready. What do you do?

Health systems science: cost pressures vs. quality of care, the attending physician's duty of care, the importance of documented clinical reasoning, and escalation through quality committees.

academic

Describe a situation where you had to persuade a sceptic to consider a different approach to a problem. What strategy worked, and why?

AAMC Teamwork and Oral Communication competencies. Change management and persuasion skills are central to health systems work — show you can lead without authority.

ethics

Population health management programmes sometimes prioritise patients with the highest cost burden or the greatest risk scores, rather than those who show up most consistently. Is this ethically justified?

Utilitarian population health logic vs. individual patient equity; underserved populations are often underidentified by risk scores; justice and access in care management targeting.

role-play

[Role-play] You are a student in a Geisinger clinic. A patient with congestive heart failure has been readmitted for the third time this month. They tell you they cannot afford both their medications and their groceries, so they have been skipping doses. You have 8 minutes.

Lead with empathy and avoid lecturing about adherence. Explore the real trade-off the patient is making, discuss medication assistance, simplified regimens, and care-management resources — exactly the kind of population-health problem Geisinger's integrated model is built to address.

data

A Geisinger care-management dashboard ranks patients by a risk score and flags the top decile for intensive outreach. You notice several clearly struggling rural patients are not in that top decile. What questions do you ask about the model?

Health systems science: risk scores can under-identify underserved or low-utilisation patients; ask about the model's inputs, validation population, and equity implications. Connect to Geisinger's population-health approach and the limits of algorithmic targeting.

academic

Geisinger pioneered embedding genomics and health-systems science into routine care. Describe a research or quality-improvement question you would want to investigate within an integrated system like Geisinger.

Show genuine engagement with systems thinking — care-pathway variation, readmission drivers, genomic screening uptake in rural populations. Avoid generic 'I want to do research'; tie it to what an integrated delivery system uniquely enables.

communication

You disagree with a more senior team member about a discharge plan for a complex patient. You believe the patient needs another day; the team is under pressure on length-of-stay metrics. How do you raise your concern?

Demonstrate speaking up without authority, framing the concern around documented clinical reasoning and patient safety rather than confronting the metric directly. Connect to Geisinger's health-systems-science emphasis on quality versus throughput.

motivation

Why are you drawn to training within an integrated health system rather than a standalone academic hospital, and what do you think that environment will teach you that a traditional centre would not?

Show real understanding of integration: aligned incentives, longitudinal data, care coordination, value-based care. Avoid simply praising Geisinger's reputation — articulate what systems training adds to your development as a physician.

ethics

Geisinger's MyCode programme returns clinically actionable genomic findings to participants. A participant's results reveal a serious hereditary risk that also implicates close relatives who are not enrolled. What are the ethical considerations in handling this?

Predictive genomics ethics: the participant's right to know, duty to warn versus relatives' autonomy and privacy, GINA protections, and how a research-and-care programme like MyCode manages cascade disclosure. Avoid asserting a single 'correct' answer.

communication

[Role-play] A standardised patient has just learned that a screening result needs urgent follow-up, but they have no transport and live 50 minutes from the Danville campus. They are frightened and overwhelmed. You have 8 minutes.

Address the fear before the logistics; validate, then problem-solve transport and follow-up within an integrated system (care coordination, telehealth, community resources). Geisinger assessors watch for empathy and scope-setting before information delivery in role-play stations.

Prepare

How to Prepare

01

Understand **Geisinger ProvenCare** in depth: what evidence-based care bundles are, how outcomes guarantees work, and what this means for physician autonomy vs. system standardisation.

02

**Prepare CASPer seriously** — it is a required component and feeds into the interview invitation decision. Practise responding to video/written SJT scenarios with the same rigour as MMI prep.

03

Research the **Geisinger Health System geography**: Geisinger Medical Center (Danville), Geisinger Wyoming Valley (Wilkes-Barre), and the rural Pennsylvania communities served.

04

Know **telehealth policy** in rural Pennsylvania — reimbursement gaps post-COVID, the rural health equity argument, and what legislative changes have occurred since 2020.

05

For role-play stations, open with **empathy and scope-setting** — Geisinger assessors watch for candidates who over-promise or skip to information-delivery without emotional attunement.

06

Prepare to reason about a **care-management or risk-score dashboard** — Geisinger's population-health model means a data or systems station may ask you to critique how patients are targeted for outreach and where equity gaps arise.

07

Read about Geisinger's **MyCode precision-health programme** so you can engage genomics-in-care questions with specifics rather than generic genetics ethics.

Pitfalls

Common Pitfalls

Not understanding ProvenCare or value-based care — at a Geisinger-integrated school, this is a differentiating knowledge gap.
Ignoring CASPer preparation — it is weighed in the interview invitation decision and some candidates underperform significantly without preparation.
Not connecting to the Northeast Pennsylvania/Scranton community context — generic "underserved community" language without rural Pennsylvania specificity.
Approaching the MMI like a traditional interview — Geisinger's stations are station-specific and blinded; personal narrative in a station where the assessor has no context reads as poor preparation.
Underestimating the health systems science emphasis — applicants who prefer pure clinical education without policy/systems thinking tend to mismatch at Geisinger.
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Geisinger Commonwealth requires CASPer as a component of the application. Your CASPer score feeds into the secondary review and interview invitation decision.

ProvenCare is Geisinger's evidence-based care bundle programme — standardised care pathways with outcome guarantees for specific procedures (e.g., CABG, hip replacement). It is one of the US's most cited examples of value-based care and shapes the clinical training environment at Geisinger Commonwealth.

As a private institution, Geisinger Commonwealth has no formal in-state preference. National applicants are considered equally.

Geisinger Commonwealth requires CASPer and uses it as part of the holistic review feeding the interview-invitation decision. Treat it as a core component of the application — practise situational-judgement scenarios with the same seriousness as your MMI preparation.

MyCode is Geisinger's large-scale precision-health initiative that sequences consenting patients and returns clinically actionable genomic results into routine care. It is one of the most cited real-world examples of integrating genomics into a health system and reflects the systems-science environment Geisinger Commonwealth trains within.

Yes — most stations are blinded, meaning assessors score your in-station reasoning and communication without access to your application file. Personal narrative is less relevant inside a station than clear, structured performance on the scenario in front of you.
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. Geisinger Commonwealth School of Medicine (MD) — 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 Geisinger Commonwealth School of Medicine (MD) interview?

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Geisinger Commonwealth School of Medicine (MD) Medicine Interview — Format, Questions & Prep Tips | NGMP