You are a bit confused.
Your friend is probably in Pharmacy school working on a Doctor of Pharmacy degree. She is not in Medical school, where she would be working on a Doctor of Medicine degree.
To enter pharmacy school you must attend a regular college for at least 2 years, taking several very difficult prerequisite courses (chemistry, organic chemistry, biochemistry, physics with calculus, biology.) After you have completed those courses you can take the PCAT (like SAT only harder) and then apply for Pharmacy school. It takes four years to go through Pharmacy school.
To get into medical school, you need a BS or BA with similar courses as prerequisites. Those courses are very hard and if you dont get As or maybe one or two B+'s then there is no point in applying to medical school because they are going to pick someone else who got all As. Medical school is only for the best, most determined students. There are some programs where you are accepted for both undergrad and med school at the same time (like Brown) but most of them still take 8 years. I thinkthere are a couple that are 7 years -- but they are EXTREMELY tough to get into.... 1% of excellent applicants are accepted.
2007-02-10 06:46:13
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answer #1
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answered by matt 7
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Are you sure she didn't do a 6 year program for pharmacy school?
Pharmacists go to pharmacy school while doctors go to medical school.
There are quite a few pharmacy schools that have accelerated programs where you only do a couple years of undergrad before going on to pharmacy school. Sometimes you start this straight out of high school, other times you apply into it once in college. Lots of different ways because it's decently common. Depending on the school, you can be all done in 5 years.
Some dental schools have something similar.
Med school's different. You need that regular bachelors first. Med school's another 4 years. If you can finish a bachelors in two years, great. However, there's no special 2 year program that I'm aware of. The shortest bachelor program I'm aware of that's tied to a medical school is 3 years (see Northwestern Univ. for example).
2007-02-12 08:42:04
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answer #2
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answered by Linkin 7
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I don't know about the path to becoming a pharmacist, but if you want to be a doctor, there are a few 6 and 7-year programs out there where you can be accepted to a school's medical school at the same time as the undergrad program. They only take the very best students, though, and you'll need to check with individual schools about those programs. I know Northwestern and Brown are two that have them.
2007-02-10 07:45:58
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answer #3
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answered by Christina 2
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i'm an anesthesiologist. No, you are able to't bypass college. with your line of questioning, there could be no element in examining a e book if it did no longer pertain to medicine. From the link under: "Baccalaureate degree you like a school degree. yet, it would not could be in the sciences. in fact, for some colleges a technological information degree is a damaging - Johns Hopkins, working example. you're able to be able to desire to tutor medical colleges you're obsessed with something. which you're prepared to spend 4 years, learn a topic rely you like, learn it, and be waiting to construct on it. choosing a school significant should not be approximately entering into medical college, it could be approximately learn what you like to think of roughly or do."
2016-10-01 22:19:50
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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You need to have a bachelors degree before you can go to med school (it doesn't have to be in the sciences) You also need to have a good GPA and perform well on the MCAT.
2007-02-10 05:45:20
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answer #5
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answered by heavy_cow 6
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read Matt's answer
2007-02-12 16:53:16
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answer #6
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answered by jloertscher 5
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