Can Blogging Help You Get Into Medical School?

by Steve on July 28, 2012

This guest post is from Ryan Nguyen, a medical student who blogs at WhiteCoatDO.

“So tell me about PracticalPremed…”

It had only been two minutes into a medical school interview when the physician sitting across from me asked me about the blog I had started as a third-year undergrad. Her face showed a slight smile, conveying her curiousness on a topic that deviated from the usual questions on volunteering, ethics, and academics. For the next few minutes, I discussed why I started PracticalPremed and what I hoped to get out of it. The confidence and connection built with my interviewers from these talking points lasted throughout the interview. Two weeks later, a call came in from the Dean of Admissions, offering me a spot in their class.

Among all the decisions I made during college, starting a blog easily ranks among the top five (right besides playing innertube waterpolo, that game is friggin’ awesome). Blogging became a creative outlet, giving me the sanity to keep memorizing the steps of TCA cycle and pushing through those brutal five and a half hour practice MCATs. When filling out primaries, I listed blogging as one of my activities, but had no idea how much it could help me with the application process. By the end of the application season, blogging had played a key role in helping fill out secondaries, acquiring interview invites, tackling interviews, and even securing acceptances.

How Can Blogging Help Premeds Get Into Medical School?

Talking Points For Interviews

For each of my five interviews, blogging and social media were topics of discussion for at least 5-10 minutes (most interviews lasted around 30 minutes). As a topic I probably knew a little more about than my interviewer, blogging was something I could discuss with relative ease. From a strategic standpoint, this meant there was less “dead time” for me to squirm during ethical scenarios or for off-the-wall interview questions such as “which kitchen appliance would you say you are?” Yes, that is a real medical school interview question.

Displaying Initiative and Creativity

In early November, a guest post I wrote was featured on HackCollege, one of the most visited college blogs on the internet. The post became pretty popular, as it was shared over 140 times on facebook and 60 times on twitter, and so I put it into one of my update letters I sent to schools in November. Just a week and a half later, an interview invite came from one of those schools.

In the sea of tens of thousands of applicants (the AMCAS twitter reports 21,732 applications submitted as of July 17th), blogging provided a unique way for my application to stick out beyond the usual GPA/MCAT/extracurriculars criteria. The website for my medical school states they desire an applicant who “demonstrates excellent verbal and written communication skills,” and so blogging became a natural way to display such skills.

Learning Responsible Social Media Usage

Between facebook, twitter, and the epatient movement, the rise of social media holds unforseen implications for the future of healthcare. A 2006 paper states that 18% of adult internet users go online to find healthcare information for themselves or others and that health searches are one of the more popular uses of the internet. And as not everything on the internet is 100% true (someone would really lie on the internet???), physicians have the unique positions of combating misinformation with their knowledge of evidence-based medicine. One such example is Dr. Howard Luks, an orthopedic surgeon who has embraced social media and posts informative medically-related articles on topics such as degenerative joint disease. Thus, an underlying theme I employed throughout my application is that I would use my skills in social media and blogging to meet patients where they were at (i.e. searching for health information online) in order to advocate for evidence-based medicine in the online world.

At the same time, many of today’s health care leaders are also wary of the dangers of social media and HIPAA violations. KevinMD features a great post on steps physicians are taking to stay careful on social media. Blogging as a medical school applicant was also a challenge in constantly being aware of the nature of published content. The knowledge that an admissions committee member could be looking at my site at any moment pushed me to maintain a sense of professionalism. Developing these skills as a premed will hopefully give future doctors the time to develop effective and professional writing skills by the time they are healthcare professionals.

Offsetting Costs Through Side Income.

With application fees, flight tickets, hotel fees, and acceptance deposits, applying to medical school is a costly endeavor. And I don’t want to even get into the six-figure average indebtedness that medical school graduates are facing in the US. In this post, Steve details how his total costs during the application year totaled $6,024 (and that’s with the $4,290 he was able to save). One of the beautiful things about blogging is the ability to convert website traffic into side income. In the past two weeks, PracticalPremed has generated $53.44 through a combination of affiliate programs and Google Adsense. While not a ton of money compared to my student loans (sigh…), it still is income that will be coming in when I’m eating, studying, sleeping, and studying some more. Now if only I could get some sponsor to pay for all of my tuition for the next four years…

For the past two years, Ryan has been blogging over at PracticalPremed. Now an upcoming first-year medical student at WesternU COMP, he runs WhiteCoatDO to document his perilous attempt at navigating medical school and beyond. Get in touch if you’re interested in starting your own blog!

{ 9 comments… read them below or add one }

1 Howard Luks July 28, 2012 at 8:28 am

Thanks for the kind mention! Good luck on your journey… feel free to reach out if I can be of any assistance!
Howard Luks MD
@hjluks

2 Ryan Nguyen July 30, 2012 at 11:46 am

Thank you Dr. Luks! May just take you up on your offer sometime in the future.

3 Alice Huang July 30, 2012 at 9:54 pm

Hi Dr. Luks! I think I am interested in starting my own blog, since I’ve been writing blogs since elementary school. However, I’ve only written in Chinese. I am an immigrant so I don’t know if I can write good posts and keep the blog running~ what should I do?

Thanks!

4 David Nguyen July 31, 2012 at 5:27 pm

What a perfect time for me to get back to reading MD Journey! A blog was originally for my personal use and a long-form of communication to my personal friends through a medium that was not Facebook. I recently took Step 1 and decided that afterwards I would work on getting my blog out there. To Ryan, or anyone else out there – do you think writing will be part of your future career?

5 Ryan Nguyen August 2, 2012 at 11:51 am

Hi David, congrats on finishing step 1! I’m actually very set on writing in the future , and blogging has been an excellent way to “practice” while still a student.

6 Christine Rose Murray August 2, 2012 at 7:13 pm

Hey!

I was reading through your blog and thought it was very insightful. I’d love to contribute, so let me know if you could fit a guest post in!

Thanks,
Christine

7 Ryan Nguyen August 2, 2012 at 10:09 pm

Hi Christine, if you’d like to guest post for either PracticalPremed or WhiteCoatDO you can contact me here: http://www.whitecoatdo.com/contact/

Also, I know Steve takes guest posts too, which you contact him about through his contact form about.

8 Charter Schools Queen Creek AZ August 8, 2012 at 1:30 pm

Interesting how social media is kinda taking over. It is very important to learn how to blog, post on facebook, twitter and set up business profiles through LinkedIn! Great ideas here.

9 SpanishMedMan August 18, 2012 at 6:39 pm

Hi Ryan, thanks for a great article. I’m a non-traditional pre-med and I recently started chronicling my journey on a blog. So far, I’m blogging anonymously since I was unsure how this would affect my gaining entrance into med school but this article is making me re-think that idea. Thank you for the insight!

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