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

SHSU COM (DO) Medicine InterviewFormat, Questions & Prep Tips

Interview September through FebruaryDecisions Rolling admissions
Overview

Sam Houston State University College of Osteopathic Medicine (SHSU COM) is **Texas's public DO medical school**, located in Huntsville in the Piney Woods of East Texas. Opened in 2020, it uses a **traditional interview format** with faculty and student sessions and is notable for using **TMDSAS** (Texas Medical and Dental Schools Application Service) rather than AACOMAS — making it administratively distinct from virtually every other DO programme in the country.

With approximately **90% of seats reserved for Texas residents**, SHSU COM is one of the most in-state-focused DO schools nationally. Interviewers probe commitment to East Texas and rural Texas communities, the osteopathic philosophy, and genuine understanding of Texas's healthcare challenges.

SHSU COM does not currently require CASPer. As a newer school (opened 2020), applicants should research its clinical infrastructure and COCA accreditation status.

Key facts

Key Facts at a Glance

Annual DO class size
~112
Interview format
Traditional — faculty and student sessions
CASPer required
No
Application system
TMDSAS (not AACOMAS) — Texas only
Tuition (2025–26)
~USD 27,000/year (in-state estimate)
Interview window
September–February
Format

Interview Format

  • Two sessions: faculty and student; approximately 30 minutes each.
  • Interview day includes campus tour, financial aid presentation, and programme overview.
  • TMDSAS application — different personal statement format and timeline from AACOMAS.
  • No MMI format.
Questions

Sample Interview Questions

motivation

SHSU COM opened in 2020 specifically to address East Texas's physician shortage. Why does that mission resonate with you, and what specific ties do you have to East Texas or rural Texas communities?

Specific East Texas connection is highly valued: growing up in the Piney Woods, family in rural Texas, prior healthcare work in Huntsville or surrounding communities. Generic rural medicine interest is insufficient for this school.

motivation

Why do you want to be a DO rather than an MD? How does osteopathic philosophy connect to the kind of medicine you want to practice in Texas?

OMT in Texas primary care: occupational injuries in oil and gas communities, agricultural workers' musculoskeletal needs, and the value of a full-scope osteopathic approach in areas with limited specialist access. Reference DO shadowing specifically.

motivation

East Texas's Piney Woods region has significant pockets of poverty and limited healthcare access. Where in Texas do you see yourself practicing in 10 years, and why?

Be honest and specific. SHSU COM screens heavily for physicians who will serve Texas — preferably East Texas. If you genuinely want to practice in Huntsville, Lufkin, Nacogdoches, or similar East Texas communities, articulate this concretely.

ethics

Texas has some of the highest rates of uninsurance in the United States and did not expand Medicaid until 2023 under limited conditions. How does this shape the patients you will encounter in clinical training, and your obligations as a physician?

Texas's coverage gap, charity care, FQHCs, the Texas Children's Health Insurance Program, and what it means practically to serve a largely uninsured population — late presentations, cost-driven non-adherence, and the ethics of triage.

ethics

What is TMDSAS, and why does it matter that SHSU COM uses TMDSAS rather than AACOMAS?

TMDSAS is the application service for all public Texas medical and dental schools. It uses a different personal statement format, different application timeline, and centralised Texas school match processes. Knowing this is a basic due-diligence signal.

communication

East Texas has a distinctive regional culture — a deep Southern, rural, religiously conservative environment. How do you approach providing culturally sensitive care in a community whose values may differ from your own background?

Cultural humility, meeting patients where they are, navigating religious and cultural health beliefs without abandoning evidence-based medicine, and the importance of building trust in tight-knit communities.

motivation

Huntsville, Texas is known as the home of Sam Houston and the Texas Department of Criminal Justice headquarters. What do you know about the community and its healthcare needs?

Huntsville's prison population (TDCJ headquarters) is a distinctive healthcare context: correctional medicine, mental health, infectious disease, and re-entry health. Research this — it distinguishes SHSU COM's community from most medical school settings.

ethics

SHSU COM is a newer school still building its clinical network and institutional culture. What do you bring to an institution at this stage of its development?

Show enthusiasm for the ground-floor opportunity, resilience in navigating institutional uncertainty, and constructive contributions to a community still finding its identity. Avoid language that frames it as a limitation.

data

East Texas's Piney Woods counties show higher rates of late-stage cancer diagnosis than Texas's urban metros. Shown that data, how would you reason about the causes, and what additional information would sharpen your interpretation?

Reason about screening access, distance to specialists, uninsurance (Texas's high uninsured rate), health literacy and care delays. Ask what you would want to verify — screening rates, follow-up data, rurality. Show population reasoning grounded in East Texas access realities.

role-play

Role-play: you are doing a correctional-medicine rotation tied to Huntsville's TDCJ system and an incarcerated patient is distrustful and convinced you 'work for the prison, not for him'. Build enough trust to take a history.

Acknowledge his perspective, clarify your role and confidentiality limits honestly, treat him with dignity, and focus on his health needs. Correctional medicine is a distinctive SHSU/Huntsville context — show ethical clarity and non-judgemental rapport-building.

academic

SHSU COM is a newer school still maturing its curriculum and clinical network. How do you learn best, and how would you handle the uncertainty of a programme that is still building its systems while preparing you for COMLEX?

Self-directed learning, adaptability, proactive feedback, and resilience amid institutional growing pains. Frame the ground-floor stage as an opportunity. Connect to board preparation without sounding anxious about the school's newness.

communication

A deeply religious East Texas patient attributes his worsening diabetes to fate and is reluctant to change diet or take medication. How do you counsel him while respecting his beliefs?

Cultural and spiritual humility, finding shared goals, motivational interviewing, and framing self-care as compatible with faith. Recognise the deep Southern, religiously conservative culture without dismissing it. Build trust in a tight-knit community.

ethics

Caring for incarcerated patients through Huntsville's prison system, you may face pressure from custody staff that conflicts with a patient's medical interest. Where does your loyalty lie, and how do you handle that tension?

The physician's duty is to the patient's health and dignity regardless of incarceration status; discuss dual-loyalty ethics, confidentiality, and refusing to let security override clinical need inappropriately. A distinctive and serious scenario for this campus.

motivation

SHSU COM uses TMDSAS and reserves around 90% of seats for Texans. Beyond residency status, what specifically convinces you — and would convince an interviewer — that you will actually build your career in Texas, ideally East Texas?

Concrete Texas ties, family, prior service in East Texas, and a credible long-term plan for towns like Lufkin or Nacogdoches. The school's entire mission is Texas workforce; generic interest fails. Specificity and authenticity are the signal.

ethics

Texas only narrowly and conditionally expanded coverage, leaving many working-poor patients uninsured. A patient needs a costly medication he cannot afford and does not qualify for assistance. Walk through your clinical and ethical approach.

Lower-cost alternatives, patient-assistance programmes, FQHC and charity pathways, transparency about trade-offs, and advocacy. Balance stewardship with non-abandonment. Reflects Texas's coverage-gap realities that shape East Texas practice.

Prepare

How to Prepare

01

Use TMDSAS, not AACOMAS — failure to understand the application system is an immediate red flag at interview.

02

Research East Texas and Huntsville specifically: the Piney Woods region, the TDCJ presence, and rural healthcare access challenges.

03

Be prepared to articulate a genuine commitment to Texas practice — SHSU COM's entire mission is building Texas's physician workforce.

04

As a newer school, research COCA accreditation status and clinical affiliate infrastructure before interviewing.

05

Submit TMDSAS early — the application opens May 1 for Texas schools.

06

Research Huntsville's correctional-medicine context (the TDCJ presence) — it is a genuinely distinctive feature of this campus and a likely interview thread.

07

Be ready to demonstrate concretely, not just assert, that your career trajectory points to Texas and ideally East Texas, since that is the school's entire reason for existing.

Pitfalls

Common Pitfalls

Not knowing that SHSU COM uses TMDSAS rather than AACOMAS.
Out-of-state applicants applying without understanding the near-total in-state preference.
Generic "why rural medicine" answers without East Texas specificity.
Not researching Huntsville's distinctive community context (TDCJ, Piney Woods, Sam Houston State University).
Showing any confusion about TMDSAS versus AACOMAS — at this school it reads as not having done basic homework on how to apply.
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Technically yes, but approximately 90% of seats are reserved for Texas residents. Out-of-state applicants should not consider SHSU COM a realistic option unless they have strong Texas ties or residency.

TMDSAS (Texas Medical and Dental Schools Application Service) is used exclusively by Texas public health professional schools. It has a different personal statement format, application timeline, and centralised match process from AACOMAS, which is used by most other DO schools nationally.

SHSU COM does not currently require CASPer. Confirm with the school for your application cycle.

TMDSAS is the centralised application for Texas public health-professions schools, with its own essay format, timeline and match process distinct from AACOMAS. Because almost every other DO school uses AACOMAS, not knowing this is treated as a basic due-diligence failure.

Huntsville hosts the Texas Department of Criminal Justice headquarters, so correctional medicine, mental health and infectious-disease care are part of the local landscape, alongside the rural Piney Woods. Awareness of this distinguishes a well-researched applicant.

Rarely. With roughly 90% of seats reserved for Texas residents, out-of-state applicants without strong Texas ties should not treat SHSU COM as a realistic option, regardless of metrics.
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. SHSU 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 SHSU COM (DO) interview?

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

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