Am I competitive?

Hi everyone,
I’m planning to apply to Tulane’s Pathologists’ Assistant program this cycle and wanted some honest feedback on whether I seem competitive.
Background:
B.S. in Biological Sciences
Overall GPA: 3.24
Recent post-baccalaureate science coursework (Biochemistry, Immunology, Medical Microbiology, Analytical Chemistry, Clinical Hematology) with all A’s
Full-time clinical laboratory experience in a cancer diagnostics setting
Previous laboratory experience in a biomarker/molecular testing laboratory
Undergraduate research experience involving molecular biology techniques
California phlebotomy license
Pathology exposure:
Shadowed PAs in surgical pathology
Shadowed autopsy services at multiple academic medical centers
Assisted with various autopsy-related activities
Continuing to gain pathology exposure and document hours
Letters of recommendation:
Planning to obtain a letter from a PA/pathologist and science faculty recommendations
My concerns:
GPA is above the minimum but not exceptional
Tulane would likely be the only PathA program I apply to this cycle
I come from more of a laboratory diagnostics background rather than a traditional pre-med or anatomy-heavy background
For those familiar with Tulane or PathA admissions in general:
Does this sound competitive for an interview?
What would you view as the strongest and weakest parts of my application?
Is there anything I should focus on improving before the August deadline?
I appreciate any honest feedback. Thanks!

reddit.com
u/Eugene_boy — 13 days ago

Am I competitive for Tulane’s Pathologists’ Assistant program?

Hi everyone,
I’m planning to apply to Tulane’s Pathologists’ Assistant program this cycle and wanted some honest feedback on whether I seem competitive.
Background:
B.S. in Biological Sciences
Overall GPA: 3.24
Recent post-baccalaureate science coursework (Biochemistry, Immunology, Medical Microbiology, Analytical Chemistry, Clinical Hematology) with all A’s
Full-time clinical laboratory experience in a cancer diagnostics setting
Previous laboratory experience in a biomarker/molecular testing laboratory
Undergraduate research experience involving molecular biology techniques
California phlebotomy license
Pathology exposure:
Shadowed PAs in surgical pathology
Shadowed autopsy services at multiple academic medical centers
Assisted with various autopsy-related activities
Continuing to gain pathology exposure and document hours
Letters of recommendation:
Planning to obtain a letter from a PA/pathologist and science faculty recommendations
My concerns:
GPA is above the minimum but not exceptional
Tulane would likely be the only PathA program I apply to this cycle
I come from more of a laboratory diagnostics background rather than a traditional pre-med or anatomy-heavy background
For those familiar with Tulane or PathA admissions in general:
Does this sound competitive for an interview?
What would you view as the strongest and weakest parts of my application?
Is there anything I should focus on improving before the August deadline?
I appreciate any honest feedback. Thanks!

reddit.com
u/Eugene_boy — 14 days ago

Hey everyone,
I’m trying to be strategic about becoming a generalist CLS (MLS) and eventually working in California. I already have a B.S. in Biology from a CSU, completed all the typical CLS prerequisite coursework (clinical micro, immunology, hematology, chem, etc.), and I’m currently working as a clinical lab tech in cytogenetics at a major center in CA. I also have my CPT1 (phlebotomy license).
Here’s my situation:
I qualify for some California CLS programs, but they’re insanely competitive
I’m seriously considering out-of-state MLS/CLS programs as a backup (or even primary path)
My goal is to come back to California and get licensed through CDPH (LFS) as smoothly as possible
What I’m trying to figure out is:
Which out-of-state CLS/MLS programs are known to transfer most easily to California licensure?

reddit.com
u/Eugene_boy — 2 months ago

Hello,

I’ve been looking into Pathologist Assistant (PA) programs and could really use some guidance from people who are either in a program or already working in the field.

I just recently graduated with a B.S. in Biology and I’m currently working as a clinical technician in a cytogenetics lab (mostly specimen processing, lab workflows, supporting genetic analysis, etc.). I also have some additional clinical lab experience and a phlebotomy license, so I’m pretty comfortable in a lab setting, but I’m realizing I want something more hands-on and directly involved with patients/pathology.

The main issue is that I don't have Anatomy & Physiology (lecture + lab), and I’ve noticed a lot of programs either require it or strongly recommend it. I’ve seen that some programs might be more flexible, but it’s been hard to tell which ones are realistic options for someone in my position.

A few questions I had:

  • Are there PA programs that are more flexible about A&P, or is it basically a hard requirement everywhere?
  • Would it be better to just bite the bullet and take A&P before applying?
  • How important is shadowing for PA school, and how did you guys find opportunities?
  • Any tips on getting shadowing experience in pathology (especially hospital labs/path departments)?
  • Based on my background, do I sound like a competitive applicant or am I missing key things?

I’m based in Southern California if that helps for any location-specific advice.

I’d really appreciate any insight, especially from people who started in a similar position. Thanks in advance

reddit.com
u/Eugene_boy — 2 months ago