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UK Medicine · 2027 Entry

MSU College of Osteopathic Medicine (DO) Medicine InterviewFormat, Questions & Prep Tips

Interview September through FebruaryDecisions Rolling decisions after interview
Overview

Michigan State University College of Osteopathic Medicine (MSUCOM) uses a **traditional interview format** at its East Lansing campus. MSUCOM holds a distinctive position as the **first DO school embedded within a major public research university** — giving it access to Big Ten biomedical research, interprofessional health education, and MSU’s vast academic infrastructure.

MSUCOM has a **strong in-state preference** as a public university with a mission to train physicians for Michigan’s underserved communities. Out-of-state applicants face stiffer competition and must articulate specific Michigan connections.

**CASPer is required** and should be prepared seriously. Rolling admissions rewards early AACOMAS submission. MSUCOM’s distributed clinical model places students in communities across Michigan — Detroit, Flint, Grand Rapids, rural Upper Peninsula — creating genuine rural/community health training.

Key facts

Key Facts at a Glance

Annual DO class size
~188
Interview format
Traditional — faculty interview
CASPer required
Yes
In-state preference
Strong (~75% Michigan residents estimated)
Application system
AACOMAS primary + MSUCOM secondary
Tuition (2025–26)
~USD 38,000/year in-state; ~USD 66,000/year out-of-state (estimated)
Interview window
September–February
Format

Interview Format

  • One-on-one faculty interview; approximately 30–45 minutes.
  • Interview day includes OMM lab tour, programme overview, and campus experience.
  • No MMI format.
Questions

Sample Interview Questions

motivation

MSUCOM is located at a major public research university. How do you envision using MSU's research resources during your medical training?

Research opportunities at a Big Ten university: faculty mentorship, dual-degree options (DO/MPH, DO/PhD), biomedical research labs. Show intellectual curiosity beyond clinical practice.

motivation

Why osteopathic medicine at a research university rather than an MD programme?

DO philosophy, OMT in primary care and sports medicine, whole-body approach. The research university context means you should also show scholarly interest.

ethics

You are caring for a patient in Flint, Michigan — a community affected by the water crisis and historical medical neglect. How do you build trust with a patient who distrusts the medical system?

Flint water crisis and its health legacy. Medical distrust in communities harmed by systemic failures. Active listening, transparency, community-based care, long-term relationship building.

motivation

MSUCOM’s distributed clinical model trains students in communities across Michigan. Where in Michigan would you want to do your clinical rotations and why?

Know the placement options: Detroit (urban underserved), Flint, Grand Rapids, Traverse City, Upper Peninsula (rural). Show you’ve researched these and have genuine reasons.

communication

Describe an experience where you worked in an interprofessional team. What was your role and what did you learn?

MSUCOM’s research university setting emphasises interprofessional health education. Nursing, pharmacy, social work, public health — show you see collaborative practice as essential.

ethics

What does academic integrity mean to you in a medical school context?

Big Ten research culture takes academic integrity seriously. Medical school honour codes, research ethics, clinical documentation integrity.

ethics

Michigan has some of the US’s most significant rural and urban health disparities. What policy or practice approaches would you advocate for as a future physician?

Medicaid expansion (Michigan did expand), rural hospital closures, Flint environmental health legacy, Detroit urban health disparities, telemedicine access.

motivation

What specifically draws you to MSUCOM over other DO schools, including other large public DO programmes?

Big Ten research access, distributed clinical model, sports medicine excellence, interprofessional education, Michigan’s specific health mission. Be specific — don’t give generic DO school answers.

role-play

You're a student-doctor at a Flint clinic. A mother is convinced the tap water is still harming her children and distrusts everything you say after years of being dismissed by officials. Talk with her.

Acknowledge the legitimacy of her distrust given the water crisis, avoid defensiveness, be transparent about what you do and don't know, validate her vigilance, and rebuild trust through partnership and follow-through.

data

Michigan spans dense urban Detroit, mid-size cities like Flint and Grand Rapids, and the rural Upper Peninsula. How would you expect the leading health challenges to differ across these settings, and why does MSUCOM's distributed model matter for that?

Urban disparities and chronic disease vs. rural access and workforce shortage vs. environmental legacies. The distributed clinical model exposes students to this range, building physicians for varied Michigan communities.

academic

MSUCOM sits inside a Big Ten research university. Tell us about a research or scholarly project you've done, what you learned, and how you'd use MSU's resources during medical school.

Concrete research experience, the questions and methods involved, and a realistic plan to engage MSU's labs, mentorship, or dual-degree options. Show scholarly curiosity beyond clinical practice.

communication

On an interprofessional team rounding on a complex patient, the pharmacist and the social worker disagree sharply about the discharge plan in front of the patient. As the student, how do you contribute constructively?

Team-based care, respectful conflict navigation, keeping the patient centred, and recognising each profession's expertise. Show you see collaborative practice as essential, not hierarchical.

ethics

You learn that data from a research project you helped with may have been selectively reported to make results look stronger. What do you do?

Research integrity, the duty to raise concerns through appropriate channels, protecting the scientific record, and understanding why honest reporting matters for patients downstream. Big Ten research culture takes this seriously.

motivation

Why osteopathic medicine at a research-intensive university specifically? How do you see the DO emphasis on whole-person care and OMT coexisting with a scholarly, research-oriented training environment?

Show that DO philosophy and rigorous science are complementary, not in tension — OMT and whole-person care alongside evidence-based, research-informed practice. Avoid framing DO as 'less academic.'

data

If statewide data showed maternal mortality in Michigan was far higher for Black women than white women, how would you reason about the causes without treating race as a biological explanation?

Frame disparities through socioeconomic, geographic, access, bias-in-care, and lived-experience lenses rather than biology. Show you'd investigate systemic and structural drivers and the role of clinician bias.

Prepare

How to Prepare

01

Prepare CASPer thoroughly — it is required and a meaningful part of the application.

02

Research MSUCOM’s distributed clinical sites across Michigan: Detroit, Flint, Grand Rapids, Upper Peninsula. Know at least three by name and their health context.

03

As a public school with strong in-state preference, out-of-state applicants must articulate specific Michigan connections.

04

Show intellectual curiosity about research — MSU is a Big Ten research university.

05

Submit AACOMAS early — rolling admissions.

06

Prepare a concrete research or scholarly example and a realistic plan to use MSU's Big Ten research resources — interviewers expect scholarly curiosity here.

07

Know at least three distributed clinical sites by name and their distinct health contexts (e.g., Flint's water-crisis legacy, the Upper Peninsula's rural access).

Pitfalls

Common Pitfalls

Not knowing Michigan’s specific health disparities — Flint water crisis, rural UP, Detroit — in an interview at a school defined by Michigan’s health mission.
Out-of-state applicants with no Michigan connection applying without acknowledging the in-state preference.
Treating CASPer as an afterthought.
Not mentioning MSUCOM's unique research university context.
Framing osteopathic medicine as less academic or in tension with research, rather than complementary to MSUCOM's scholarly, research-intensive environment.
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

MSUCOM is the only DO school embedded within a major public research university (MSU), giving students access to Big Ten research resources, interprofessional health education, and one of the broadest academic environments of any DO programme.

As a Michigan public university, MSUCOM has a strong mission-based preference for Michigan residents. Approximately 70–80% of each entering class are Michigan residents (estimated). Out-of-state applicants must present compelling applications.

MSUCOM graduates match into primary care at high rates given the school’s mission, but also match into competitive specialties through NRMP. Sports medicine, family medicine, internal medicine, and emergency medicine are well-represented.

As a Michigan public university, MSUCOM fills roughly 70–80% of each class with Michigan residents (estimated), so out-of-state applicants face stiffer competition and benefit from articulating specific, genuine Michigan connections.

Yes — MSUCOM's location within a Big Ten research university provides access to faculty mentorship, biomedical labs, and dual-degree options such as DO/MPH or DO/PhD. Confirm current programme offerings with the college.

Students complete clinical training across Michigan communities — including Detroit, Flint, Grand Rapids, Traverse City, and the Upper Peninsula. Site assignment processes vary; research the options and discuss preferences with the college.
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. MSU College of Osteopathic Medicine (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 MSU College of Osteopathic Medicine (DO) interview?

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

MSU College of Osteopathic Medicine (DO) Medicine Interview — Format, Questions & Prep Tips | NGMP