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UK Medicine · 2027 Entry

Touro CA COM (DO) Medicine InterviewFormat, Questions & Prep Tips

Interview August through FebruaryDecisions Rolling decisions after interview
Overview

Touro University California COM (TUCOM) uses a **traditional panel interview** with faculty and a current student at its Vallejo campus in the San Francisco Bay Area. Founded in 1997, TUCOM is one of the most applied-to DO schools in the country and carries a strong emphasis on **preventive medicine, health equity, and interprofessional education**.

The school requires **CASPer** as part of its admissions process — prepare this thoroughly. TUCOM’s Bay Area setting gives it access to one of the most diverse healthcare ecosystems in the US, and interviewers expect applicants who understand and value that diversity.

TUCOM’s preventive medicine focus means interviewers probe whether applicants see the physician’s role as extending beyond clinical encounters into population health and structural determinants of wellness.

Key facts

Key Facts at a Glance

Annual DO class size
~165
Interview format
Traditional — faculty panel + student
CASPer required
Yes
Application system
AACOMAS primary + TUCOM secondary
Location
Vallejo, CA (San Francisco Bay Area)
Interview window
August–February
Format

Interview Format

  • Traditional panel: typically one faculty member, one student; ~30–45 minutes.
  • Campus tour and student meet-and-greet on interview day.
  • CASPer score reviewed prior to interview invitation.
Questions

Sample Interview Questions

motivation

TUCOM has a strong preventive medicine focus. How does preventive medicine align with your own vision of what a physician should do?

Go beyond "catching disease early." Discuss population health, social determinants, upstream causes of illness, and the physician's role in advocacy and health literacy.

motivation

The Bay Area has one of the most diverse and unequal healthcare landscapes in the country — world-class research hospitals alongside communities with severe access gaps. How does that context shape your approach to medical training?

Show awareness of health disparities in Northern California: unhoused populations, agricultural communities, immigrant health, language access. Be specific.

ethics

A patient refuses a recommended preventive screening (e.g., colorectal cancer screening) citing personal beliefs. How do you approach this conversation?

Patient autonomy, motivational interviewing, avoiding paternalism. Preventive medicine schools want physicians who can persuade without coercing.

communication

Describe a time you worked with a team of people from different professional backgrounds (not just medical). How did you contribute and what did you learn?

TUCOM values interprofessional education. Reference pharmacy, PA, nursing, or social work if possible.

ethics

California passed legislation on single-payer healthcare. What do you see as the main arguments for and against a single-payer system, and what is your view?

Understand both sides. Show systems-level thinking. Acknowledge complexity before expressing a nuanced view.

motivation

How does an osteopathic philosophy of whole-person care apply specifically to preventive medicine?

Connect OMT to musculoskeletal prevention; connect whole-person view to lifestyle medicine, mental health, and social determinants.

motivation

Tell us about a healthcare experience you had in an underserved or community health setting. What did you observe about structural barriers to care?

Specificity. Name the population, describe the barrier, and explain what it revealed about healthcare systems.

motivation

TUCOM attracts applicants from across the country to the Bay Area. What does this location offer you that you could not get elsewhere, and what sacrifices does it require?

Realistic self-awareness about cost of living in the Bay Area, plus genuine excitement about the clinical training environment.

ethics

A colleague makes a culturally insensitive remark to a patient in your clinical setting. How do you respond?

Professional responsibility, patient protection, and interprofessional dynamics. Show you act, not just observe.

motivation

Why osteopathic medicine rather than allopathic (MD)?

Honest, specific answer. Reference OMM, the DO philosophy, and ideally a personal interaction with a DO physician. Avoid "DOs and MDs are the same now" as a primary answer.

role-play

You are a student in a Vallejo-area clinic. A patient who is unhoused arrives for a diabetes check but says she has nowhere to refrigerate insulin and often skips meals. The attending is running 45 minutes behind. What do you do with your time and this patient?

Meet the patient where she is: non-refrigerated insulin options, social-work and shelter referral, realistic regimen, and not blaming. Show preventive, structural thinking under real time pressure.

data

A study reports that a new screening programme cut late-stage diagnoses in one Bay Area county. What would you want to know about the study design before recommending it be expanded statewide?

Sample size, comparison group, lead-time bias, generalisability, cost. Preventive-medicine schools want candidates who interrogate evidence rather than accept headline results.

communication

How would you counsel a hesitant patient on a recommended vaccine without dismissing their concerns or resorting to pressure?

Motivational interviewing, eliciting the specific worry, sharing risk in plain terms, preserving the relationship. TUCOM's prevention focus rewards persuasion grounded in respect.

motivation

The Bay Area is expensive and the programme is demanding. Tell us about a time financial or logistical stress affected your work and how you managed it.

Self-awareness, planning, and resilience around real constraints. TUCOM notices when applicants are naive about cost of living — show you have thought it through.

ethics

Public-health authorities recommend a measure that benefits the population but inconveniences individual patients (for example, a contact-tracing or isolation request). How do you think about the balance between population health and individual autonomy?

Engage the genuine tension between community benefit and personal liberty; reference proportionality and trust. A nuanced answer fits TUCOM's population-health identity better than picking a side.

Prepare

How to Prepare

01

Complete CASPer rigorously — it affects your interview invitation.

02

Research TUCOM's preventive medicine emphasis and have concrete talking points about population health and health equity.

03

Know Bay Area health demographics: unhoused populations, immigrant communities, agricultural worker health, language access challenges.

04

Prepare an interprofessional collaboration story — TUCOM's campus includes pharmacy and PA programmes.

05

Apply early in the AACOMAS cycle; TUCOM is extremely competitive by volume.

06

Practise evidence-appraisal out loud — TUCOM's prevention focus invites questions where you must critique a study or screening claim, not just recall facts.

07

Have a concrete plan for Bay Area cost of living; interviewers read naivety about finances as a fit concern.

Pitfalls

Common Pitfalls

Generic "why osteopathic medicine" answers — TUCOM's Bay Area location increases competition; specificity matters.
Ignoring CASPer preparation; it is part of the admissions screening.
Failing to articulate a preventive or population health interest — clinical-only framing misses the school's mission.
Underestimating the cost of living in the Bay Area without a plan — interviewers notice when applicants are naive about this.
Framing prevention only as 'catching disease early' — TUCOM expects population-health and social-determinants depth.
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. TUCOM requires CASPer as part of the application review. Complete it before your application is reviewed.

Clinical rotations are primarily across Northern California — Bay Area hospitals, FQHCs, and community sites. Some students rotate at more distant affiliated sites.

Yes. DO graduates compete in the same NRMP residency match as MD graduates and have full practice rights in all 50 states. TUCOM alumni match into primary care and specialty programmes.

It runs through the curriculum and clinical emphasis — population health, social determinants, lifestyle medicine, and community engagement are framed as core physician work, not electives. Interviewers expect applicants who see prevention as central.

Yes. TUCOM shares its Vallejo campus with pharmacy and PA programmes, and team-based, collaborative care is part of the training culture. Prepare a genuine interprofessional example.

Very. As one of the most applied-to DO schools in the country in a desirable Bay Area location, TUCOM draws a large national pool. Strong CASPer, specificity about its mission, and early AACOMAS submission all help.
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. Touro CA 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 Touro CA COM (DO) interview?

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

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