Skip to main content
Back to interviews
UK Medicine · 2027 Entry

NSU-COM (DO) Medicine InterviewFormat, Questions & Prep Tips

Interview September through FebruaryDecisions Rolling decisions after interview
Overview

Nova Southeastern University Dr. Kiran C. Patel College of Osteopathic Medicine (NSU-COM) uses a **traditional interview format** at its Fort Lauderdale (Davie), Florida campus. NSU-COM is one of the **largest and most established private DO schools in the US** (founded 1979), with over four decades of osteopathic physician graduates.

NSU-COM is embedded within NSU’s comprehensive health sciences campus — the same location as schools of pharmacy, dental medicine, nursing, optometry, and public health. Interviewers probe **interprofessional healthcare orientation, South Florida’s health equity landscape, and osteopathic philosophy**.

**CASPer is required** and should be prepared thoroughly. South Florida’s extraordinary demographic diversity — Caribbean diaspora, Latin American, Haitian, elderly/Medicare population — is a defining clinical context. Rolling admissions rewards early AACOMAS submission.

Key facts

Key Facts at a Glance

Annual DO class size
~237 (Fort Lauderdale campus)
Interview format
Traditional — faculty interview
CASPer required
Yes
Application system
AACOMAS primary + NSU-COM secondary
Tuition (2025–26)
~USD 56,000/year
Interview window
September–February
Format

Interview Format

  • One-on-one or small panel faculty interview; approximately 30–45 minutes.
  • Interview day includes NSU health sciences campus tour, programme overview, and student interaction.
  • No MMI format.
Questions

Sample Interview Questions

motivation

NSU-COM is part of NSU’s multi-college health sciences campus. How do you see interprofessional collaboration shaping your medical education here?

Pharmacy, dental, nursing, optometry, public health — all on the same campus. Show enthusiasm for team-based care, shared patient cases, and cross-professional learning.

motivation

Why osteopathic medicine, and how does South Florida's patient population shape the kind of physician you want to become?

DO philosophy plus South Florida demographic awareness: Caribbean and Latin American diaspora, elderly Medicare population, large uninsured immigrant communities, tropical medicine considerations.

ethics

A Haitian patient refuses a recommended surgery due to cultural and spiritual beliefs about surgery. How do you approach this?

Cultural humility, patient autonomy, exploring the specific cultural context of the refusal, ensuring truly informed consent, interpreter services, alternative treatments.

motivation

South Florida has one of the US’s largest and most diverse immigrant populations with significant healthcare access barriers. How would you address these as a physician?

Language barriers, undocumented patients, cultural health beliefs, FQHCs, community health workers, navigator programmes. Show systems-level thinking.

communication

How do you provide culturally competent care to a patient whose cultural health practices differ significantly from evidence-based recommendations?

Mutual respect, exploring the practice before dismissing it, understanding cultural context, finding common ground with evidence-based care.

ethics

Describe a time you worked in a team with strong disagreement about the right course of action. How was it resolved?

Team dynamics, respectful disagreement, consensus-building, knowing when to escalate. Interprofessional team example strongest.

ethics

Florida has a large uninsured population and did not expand Medicaid until 2023. How does this affect the patients you will treat at NSU-COM affiliated sites?

Florida’s late Medicaid expansion, remaining coverage gaps, safety-net hospitals, FQHCs, community health centre network. Show awareness of Florida’s specific healthcare policy context.

motivation

NSU-COM named its college after Dr. Kiran C. Patel. What do you know about Dr. Patel’s philanthropy and what does it represent to you?

Dr. Kiran C. Patel is a physician-philanthropist whose donation supported NSU-COM. Show you researched this before the interview — it demonstrates genuine school-specific engagement.

role-play

You're a student-doctor at an NSU-affiliated South Florida clinic. An elderly Cuban-American patient on Medicare is overwhelmed by conflicting advice from several specialists and asks you, in halting English, to just 'tell me what to do.' Talk with her.

Use an interpreter as needed, simplify and reconcile the conflicting plans, act as the trusted coordinating relationship, check understanding with teach-back, and respect her autonomy while reducing her confusion.

data

South Florida has unusually high concentrations of Caribbean, Haitian, Cuban, Venezuelan, and elderly Medicare populations within the same metro. How would that demographic mix shape the disease burden and the communication skills a physician needs here?

Diverse chronic disease patterns, tropical and infectious considerations, geriatric polypharmacy, and the central role of language access and cultural competency. Reason from demographics to clinical and communication priorities.

academic

NSU-COM is a large, established school. With ~237 students, self-direction matters. Describe a time you built and stuck to a rigorous study system, and how you'd adapt it to COMLEX-USA preparation here.

Concrete, disciplined study system (spaced repetition, active recall, integrated review) scaled to a large-class environment and the COMLEX-USA series, with USMLE often added. Show you won't get lost in a big cohort.

communication

On NSU's shared health-sciences campus, you're in an interprofessional case session and a pharmacy student flags a serious interaction you'd missed, somewhat bluntly. How do you respond in the moment and afterward?

Grace under correction, valuing each profession's expertise, putting patient safety first, and modelling collaborative humility. Show interprofessional teamwork as a strength of the NSU model.

ethics

An undocumented patient confides that they've been skipping care for a serious condition out of fear that seeking treatment will expose them. How do you respond ethically?

Duty to care regardless of immigration status, confidentiality, building trust, and connecting to safety-net and FQHC resources. Show patient advocacy and awareness of fear as a structural barrier in South Florida.

motivation

Why osteopathic medicine in a setting like South Florida specifically? How do whole-person care and OMT fit a population this diverse and this heavily geriatric?

Whole-person, culturally attuned care across a diverse population, OMT for musculoskeletal and chronic pain in the elderly, and a prevention orientation. Ground the DO choice in shadowing and the South Florida context.

data

If NSU-affiliated clinics found that Haitian patients completed follow-up care at much lower rates than other groups, what would you want to understand before concluding anything?

Language, trust, cultural health beliefs, transport, cost, and prior experiences — investigated through socioeconomic and lived-experience lenses, never treating ethnicity as a biological cause. Avoid patient-blame framing.

Prepare

How to Prepare

01

Prepare CASPer thoroughly — it is required and reviewed seriously.

02

Research South Florida’s demographic health landscape: Haitian, Caribbean, Cuban, Venezuelan, elderly Medicare populations and their specific health challenges.

03

Know NSU’s multi-college health sciences campus — pharmacy, dental, nursing, optometry, public health — and prepare interprofessional collaboration talking points.

04

Research Dr. Kiran C. Patel’s philanthropic story and what it means to the school.

05

Submit AACOMAS early — rolling admissions.

06

Prepare concrete interprofessional collaboration talking points — NSU's shared health-sciences campus makes team-based care a central, recurring interview theme.

07

Be ready to reason from South Florida's specific demographic mix (Haitian, Cuban, Venezuelan, elderly Medicare) to the clinical and communication skills the population demands.

Pitfalls

Common Pitfalls

Not knowing South Florida's demographic diversity and its health implications.
Treating CASPer as an afterthought.
Not knowing NSU-COM’s interprofessional campus advantage.
Not researching the Dr. Kiran C. Patel naming gift.
Explaining ethnic-group health disparities through biology rather than socioeconomic, access, and lived-experience factors — interviewers expect structurally literate, non-stereotyping reasoning.
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

NSU-COM’s main campus is in Fort Lauderdale (Davie). NSU also operates the Health Professions Division (HPCOM) branch in Fort Myers, Florida, expanding clinical training across South Florida.

NSU-COM is one of the most applied-to DO schools nationally, with approximately 6,000–8,000 applications for ~237 seats. Acceptance rate is approximately 4–5%. Competitive applicants have MCAT ~504–508+ and GPA ~3.55+.

NSU-COM graduates have decades of match history and match into residencies nationally across all specialties through the NRMP. Primary care, internal medicine, and family medicine are well-represented, and graduates also match into competitive specialties.

Sharing a campus with pharmacy, dental medicine, nursing, optometry, and public health enables interprofessional education — shared cases, team-based learning, and collaborative-practice habits that mirror real clinical teams.

With roughly 6,000–8,000 applications for ~237 seats, strong academics (MCAT ~504–508+, GPA ~3.55+) form the baseline, but genuine interprofessional orientation, South Florida community-health awareness, and authentic osteopathic motivation differentiate applicants.

All NSU-COM DO students take the COMLEX-USA series, and many also sit the USMLE to broaden residency options. The school's long Match history supports placement across specialties nationally.
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. NSU-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 NSU-COM (DO) interview?

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

NSU-COM (DO) Medicine Interview — Format, Questions & Prep Tips | NGMP