Pre-Med Roadmap

A simple, organized checklist from where you are to medical school acceptance. No two paths are the same — use this as your guide, not your rulebook.

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📚 Prerequisites

The science courses required for almost every medical school. Complete these with the highest grades you can — they form your science GPA.

"The secret of getting ahead is getting started." — Mark Twain
Post-bacc students: You can complete all of these in 2 years. Typical load: 2 science courses + labs per semester. Summer sessions help you finish faster.
Break it down. Don't think "13 courses." Think "this semester, I'm taking Gen Chem and Bio." One semester at a time.

📎 Study Resources

🏥 Clinical Experience

Direct patient contact experience. Aim for 200+ hours. Quality matters more than quantity — reflect on what you see.

"The good physician treats the disease; the great physician treats the patient who has the disease." — William Osler
How to find opportunities: Call your local hospital's volunteer office. Check Indeed for "medical scribe" or "patient care tech." Ask your pre-med advisor. Ask physicians you shadow.
Scheduling tip: Even 4 hours/week adds up to 200 hours in a year. Block it on your calendar like a class — same day, same time each week.
For PA applicants: You need 1,000-3,000+ patient care hours. Start early and aim for paid roles (CNA, EMT) that give you volume.

👨‍⚕️ Shadowing

Observe physicians (and other providers) in their daily work. Aim for 50+ hours across at least 3 specialties.

"Observation is the most enduring of the pleasures of life." — George Meredith
How to get shadowing: Ask your own doctor first. Contact hospital volunteer coordinators. Cold-email physicians (keep it brief and professional). Check if your school has a shadowing program.
For CAA applicants: You need 16+ hours specifically shadowing anesthesiologists/CAAs in the OR. Contact the hospital's anesthesia department directly.
Make it easy on yourself: Schedule shadowing in 4-hour blocks. Bring a small notepad. Write one reflection per session — just 3-4 sentences about what you observed.

🤝 Volunteering

Non-clinical community service. Shows you care beyond medicine. Aim for 100+ hours in sustained commitments (not one-off events).

"We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give." — Winston Churchill
Can't commit weekly? That's okay. Even biweekly at the same org for a year is 100+ hours and shows sustained commitment.

🔬 Research

Shows intellectual curiosity. Not required for all schools, but strongly preferred for MD and expected at research-heavy programs.

"Research is formalized curiosity. It is poking and prying with a purpose." — Zora Neale Hurston
No research available? Look into summer REU programs (NSF-funded, paid). Or do a literature review project with any professor — doesn't need a lab.

📝 MCAT Preparation

3-6 months of dedicated study. Take it after completing your prerequisites (especially biochem, psych, and sociology).

"It does not matter how slowly you go as long as you do not stop." — Confucius

📎 MCAT Resources

MCAT with ADHD: Study in 45-min blocks with 10-min breaks. Use Anki daily (even 10 min counts). Don't compare your timeline to others. Many people need 4-6 months, some need more — that's fine.

✉️ Applications

Submit as early as possible in the cycle. "Early" means May-June for AMCAS (MD) and June-July for AACOMAS (DO).

"You miss 100% of the shots you don't take." — Wayne Gretzky
Timeline varies. Traditional students apply junior year summer. Post-bacc students apply after finishing prerequisites. Career changers — apply when your app is strong, not when you feel rushed.
Don't try to do everything at once. Break the application into weekly tasks: Week 1 = school list. Week 2 = activities list. Week 3 = personal statement draft. One piece at a time.

⚖️ Balance & Wellness

Pre-med is a marathon, not a sprint. Burnout is real and it derails more students than bad grades do.

"Almost everything will work again if you unplug it for a few minutes — including you." — Anne Lamott
For neurodivergent students: Use body doubling (study with someone). Try the Pomodoro method (25 min on, 5 off). External structure helps — set alarms, use planners, keep routines. If you're unmedicated and struggling, talk to a doctor. Getting help is not weakness, it's strategy.

📎 Useful Tools