New York Medical College (MD) Medicine InterviewFormat, Questions & Prep Tips
New York Medical College (NYMC) uses a **traditional conversational interview** format — applicants meet with two to three faculty physicians and a current medical student in separate one-on-one sessions. Interviews are non-standardised and open-ended; interviewers read the full application in advance.
NYMC is one of the **largest private MD programmes** in the US (~200 students/year), affiliated with Westchester Medical Center and the Touro University System. Interviewers tend to probe academic record, research or clinical experience, and fit with the school’s collegial culture.
All four AAMC Core Competency domains are assessed: **Thinking and Reasoning**, **Science**, **Interpersonal**, and **Intrapersonal**.
Key Facts at a Glance
Interview Format
- Traditional conversational format — separate sessions with one faculty member and one current student.
- Each session runs approximately 25–40 minutes; interviewers read the full application beforehand.
- Questions are open-ended and behavioural; no MMI stations or scripted prompts.
- Interview day includes an admissions presentation, campus tour, and lunch at Westchester Medical Center.
- Large cohorts of applicants interviewed simultaneously; atmosphere is structured but relaxed.
Sample Interview Questions
Walk me through your path to medicine. What experiences have been most formative?
Classic traditional-interview opener. Tell a coherent story — not a chronological résumé recitation. Interviewers want to see a through-line of meaning, not a list of accomplishments.
Why NYMC? What specifically about Westchester Medical Center and the Touro affiliation interests you?
Research WMC's Level I Trauma Center, its academic clinical programmes, and Touro's health professions focus. Avoid generic "New York location" answers.
A terminally ill patient tells you they want to stop treatment and go home. The family wants everything done. How do you navigate this?
The patient has capacity → their autonomous wishes prevail. Discuss goals-of-care conversations, palliative care referral, how to support the family while honouring the patient, and the role of ethics consultation.
Tell me about your most significant research or clinical research experience. What was the question, the finding, and what did it teach you?
NYMC values academic rigour. Show intellectual ownership — know your methodology, limitations, and what you would do differently. If you have no formal research, a clinical observation project or quality improvement initiative works.
A hospital administrator pressures your department to discharge patients faster to reduce costs. You feel some patients are not ready. What do you do?
Discuss documentation of clinical concern, escalation through patient safety channels, attending support, and the tension between institutional financial pressures and quality of care.
A patient declines a blood transfusion on religious grounds following a traumatic injury. What do you do?
Jehovah's Witness scenario. Confirm capacity, respect the refusal, document fully, explore alternatives (cell salvage, EPO, etc.), involve ethics committee if needed. Do not be paternalistic.
What specialty are you considering, and how has that interest shaped your pre-medical experiences?
Answer honestly; NYMC does not penalise primary care vs. subspecialty interests. Show that your clinical exposure matches your stated interest and that you have reflected on it.
Should physicians be required to provide services that conflict with their personal beliefs, such as prescribing contraception or performing certain procedures?
Discuss conscientious objection frameworks, duty to refer, patient non-abandonment, and the distinction between individual belief and professional obligation. Acknowledge the tension without dismissing either side.
Describe a time when a team member disagreed with your approach to a task. How did you handle it?
STAR structure. Show that you listen, seek common ground, and can change your mind with new information — not just that you were ultimately right.
What would your closest friend say is your greatest weakness as it relates to becoming a physician?
Pick a real, non-trivial weakness — not "I work too hard." Show self-awareness and describe concrete steps you have taken to address it.
Role-play: You are a student volunteer and must explain to a patient (played by the interviewer) that the specialist appointment they were promised at Westchester Medical Center has been delayed by several weeks. They are anxious and upset. Begin.
Apologise genuinely without making excuses, validate the anxiety, give whatever concrete information and interim plan you can, and avoid over-promising a fix you cannot guarantee. The skill assessed is honest, empathic communication under a patient's frustration.
You are shown two studies on the same drug: a large observational study suggesting strong benefit, and a smaller randomised controlled trial showing no significant effect. How do you reconcile them, and which would you weight more?
Discuss confounding and indication bias in observational data versus the internal validity of randomisation, while noting the RCT's power limitations and generalisability. NYMC values academic rigour — show you can critically appraise conflicting evidence rather than just quoting a hierarchy.
NYMC is one of the largest MD programmes in the country, with around 200 students per class. How do you see yourself thriving and standing out in a large cohort rather than a small one?
Turn the size into a positive — breadth of peers, clubs, research mentors, and clinical sites — while showing self-awareness about staying engaged and finding mentorship in a big class. Avoid implying you would prefer a smaller school; that reads as poor fit.
A research mentor offers to add your name to a paper you contributed only minimally to, saying it will help your residency application. How do you respond?
Apply authorship ethics (ICMJE criteria): authorship requires substantial contribution. Discuss declining gift authorship, the integrity cost of padding a CV, and how to raise it tactfully with a senior mentor. Show that long-term integrity outweighs a line on an application.
Touro's institutional values emphasise community, service, and respect for diverse backgrounds. How do those values translate into the daily behaviour of a good physician, beyond admissions rhetoric?
Move from abstract values to concrete clinical behaviours — accommodating religious and cultural practices, treating ancillary staff with respect, serving patients regardless of background. Show you understand institutional mission as lived practice, not a brochure phrase.
How to Prepare
Prepare your **medicine story** in conversational form — NYMC interviewers are experienced clinicians who respond well to genuine narrative, not polished pitch delivery.
Research **Westchester Medical Center** (Level I Trauma, Maria Fareri Children's Hospital, Behavioural Health Center) and identify two or three specific clinical programmes relevant to your interests.
Know the **Touro University System** context: Touro is the largest Jewish-sponsored independent educational system in the world; values of community, diversity, and service are embedded in NYMC's institutional identity.
Prepare for ethics questions using the four-box method (Jonsen): medical indications, patient preferences, quality of life, contextual features — it organises complex cases efficiently.
Have three to five STAR stories ready covering: ethical dilemma, team conflict, academic challenge, leadership, and clinical or research epiphany.
Prepare smart questions for each interviewer — faculty questions about research, the student interviewer about day-to-day life, clerkship culture, and board preparation resources.
Re-read your own AMCAS Work and Activities and personal statement the night before — NYMC's conversational format means an interviewer may anchor the whole session on a single experience you mentioned, and vagueness about your own record reads as disengagement.
Common Pitfalls
Frequently Asked Questions
Related guides
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Free Interview Resources
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The 6 NHS values examiners listen for in every interview answer.
Read guideMedical School Rankings
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Read guideUCAS 2026 Personal Statement
The new three-question format your interviewer will reference.
Read guideContextual Offers for Medicine
Every UK medical school's widening-access scheme in one place.
Read guideSources & official admissions information
We cross-check every interview guide against the school's own admissions guidance and the UK regulators.
- New York Medical College (MD) — official admissions page — Programme overview, entry requirements, interview format and timeline straight from the school.
- UCAT Consortium — Official UCAT registration, test format, scoring methodology and free practice materials.
- General Medical Council (GMC) — approved UK medical schools — Statutory regulator. Approved medical schools, the registered-doctor register, and fitness-to-practise standards.
- Medical Schools Council — Selecting-for-excellence guidance, MMI principles, and an A–Z of UK medical schools.
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