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Central Michigan University College of Medicine MMI Practice Questions

Mount Pleasant, Michigan
Medicine (MD)
MMI and Group Format

Practice Questions

  1. How would you contribute to the collaborative learning environment at CMU College of Medicine?

    Personal (Program)TeamworkSocial Competence
  2. Michigan's rural counties show significantly higher prescription opioid rates compared to urban counties, although urban areas have higher overdose death rates. This pattern suggests different approaches are needed for opioid crisis management across the state. Should Michigan implement region-specific opioid prescribing guidelines that account for rural-urban differences in healthcare access and utilization patterns?

    Opinion (Policy)Critical ThinkingService OrientationEthical Responsibility and Integrity
  3. Tell me about yourself.

    Personal (Fit)Oral CommunicationService Orientation
  4. Why medicine?

    Personal (Fit)Oral CommunicationService Orientation
  5. Why Central Michigan University College of Medicine?

    Personal (Program)Oral CommunicationService Orientation
  6. What would you do if a colleague of yours made a mistake and doesn't want to tell the patient?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityOral Communication
  7. Do you believe diversity is important in a healthcare setting? Why or why not?

    Opinion (Policy)Cultural CompetenceSocial Competence
  8. You are a physician in a for-profit hospital system. Administration has set a productivity target requiring you to see 30 patients per day to meet revenue goals. You're currently seeing 22 patients per day and spending adequate time with each. Your supervisor implies that your contract renewal depends on meeting these targets. You're concerned that seeing more patients will compromise care quality. What would you do? What would you consider?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityCritical ThinkingService Orientation
  9. Is it ethically acceptable for physicians to operate concierge practices that charge annual membership fees, effectively creating two-tier care?

    Opinion (Ethics)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityService OrientationSocial Competence
  10. Should the US transition to a single-payer healthcare system?

    Opinion (Policy)Critical ThinkingService OrientationSocial Competence
  11. What would you do if your employer forced you to work over Thanksgiving weekend, interfering with your family plans?

    SituationalReliability and DependabilityResilience and Adaptability
  12. If your life were a movie, what would the theme?

    QuirkyOral CommunicationSocial Competence
  13. Describe a situation where you had to maintain professionalism under difficult or frustrating circumstances.

    Personal (Behavioral)Reliability and DependabilityResilience and AdaptabilityEthical Responsibility and Integrity
  14. How will you handle burnout and being overwhelmed?

    Personal (Fit)Resilience and AdaptabilityCapacity for Improvement
  15. Should healthcare institutions implement mandatory unconscious bias training for all staff and students?

    Opinion (Ethics)Cultural CompetenceCritical Thinking
  16. Do you think pharmaceutical companies should be allowed to advertise drugs to consumers?

    Opinion (Policy)Critical ThinkingEthical Responsibility and Integrity
  17. You are a hospital administrator. You discover the hospital schedules longer appointments for privately insured patients than those with public insurance. What do you think about this? What would you do?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityService Orientation
  18. Describe a situation where you made a mistake that affected others. What did you do?

    Personal (Behavioral)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityReliability and Dependability
  19. You overhear colleagues spreading a harmful rumor about a co-worker’s personal life. You consider reporting it, but one of the people gossiping is close to your manager. The targeted colleague is unaware but already seems isolated. How do you handle this, knowing it could affect your standing in the team?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegritySocial Competence
  20. Tell me about a time you changed your mind after learning new information.

    Personal (Behavioral)Capacity for ImprovementCritical Thinking
  21. Should physicians have an ethical obligation to practice in underserved areas of Michigan after receiving taxpayer-funded medical education?

    Opinion (Ethics)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityService OrientationCritical Thinking
  22. Tell me about your lowest grade.

    Personal (Fit)Capacity for ImprovementReliability and DependabilityEthical Responsibility and Integrity
  23. A patient you've been working with for months asks you out on a date. How do you handle this?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityOral Communication
  24. What do you know about CMU College of Medicine's longitudinal integrated clerkship model?

    Personal (Program)Capacity for ImprovementCritical Thinking
  25. Prior authorization requirements have become increasingly burdensome in the US, with physicians spending hours obtaining insurance approval for treatments and medications. Some states have proposed legislation limiting or streamlining prior authorization. Should there be restrictions on insurance companies' ability to require prior authorization? Discuss this policy with the interviewer.

    Opinion (Policy)Critical ThinkingService OrientationEthical Responsibility and Integrity
  26. What are your weaknesses?

    Personal (Fit)Capacity for ImprovementOral Communication
  27. Dr. Sharma often prescribes vitamin supplements to patients complaining of low energy. She knows there is no clear evidence of deficiency, but believes "it can't hurt and might make them feel cared for." Consider the ethical issues raised by Dr. Sharma's actions. What professional obligations might conflict here?

    Opinion (Ethics)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityCritical ThinkingReliability and Dependability
  28. Tell me about a time when you were impacted by miscommunication.

    Personal (Behavioral)Oral CommunicationCapacity for Improvement
  29. Describe a time working with someone you did not like.

    Personal (Behavioral)TeamworkSocial Competence
  30. Should lifestyle choices (smoking, obesity, non-compliance) affect priority for organ transplants?

    Opinion (Ethics)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityCritical ThinkingService Orientation
  31. A coworker asks you to clock them in when they'll be 30 minutes late, saying their supervisor is 'unreasonably strict' and they might get fired for being late again. What do you do?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityReliability and Dependability
  32. Why do you want to go to school in Mount Pleasant?

    Personal (Program)Oral CommunicationService Orientation
  33. If animals could talk, which species would be the rudest?

    QuirkyOral CommunicationSocial Competence
  34. You are a medical student on clinical rotation. You witness a nurse making a medication error. When you point it out, they become defensive. The attending is unreachable for 30 minutes. What do you do?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityTeamwork
  35. The Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA) currently requires emergency departments to provide stabilizing treatment to anyone regardless of ability to pay. However, uninsured patients often receive large bills they cannot pay, creating financial strain for both patients and hospitals. Do physicians have an ethical obligation to provide care to uninsured patients beyond emergency stabilization? What are the limits of this obligation? Discuss with the interviewer.

    Opinion (Ethics)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityService OrientationCritical Thinking
  36. You’re volunteering at a community mental-health clinic. During a family dinner, your brother proudly mentions that he just hired a new employee named Rachel. You realize it’s a patient from your clinic who has a history of manic episodes that recently caused workplace disruptions. What do you do?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityCritical Thinking
  37. You are a medical student. An undocumented immigrant patient needs ongoing treatment for a chronic condition. They're terrified to return for follow-up appointments because they fear deportation. What do you do?

    SituationalCultural CompetenceEmpathy and CompassionService Orientation
  38. Your roommate confides in you that they have been struggling with depression and occasionally use prescription medication that was not prescribed to them. They ask you not to tell anyone. How do you respond?

    SituationalEmpathy and CompassionEthical Responsibility and IntegritySocial Competence
  39. What do you know about Central Michigan University College of Medicine's problem-based learning curriculum?

    Personal (Program)Capacity for ImprovementCritical Thinking
  40. A grateful patient leaves a $100 gift card and a thank-you note at the front desk addressed specifically to you. What do you do?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityReliability and Dependability
  41. What community service activities have you done?

    Personal (Behavioral)Service OrientationSocial CompetenceTeamwork
  42. Describe a time you had to respect someone's autonomy even when you disagreed with their choice

    Personal (Behavioral)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityEmpathy and CompassionCritical Thinking
  43. What do you think about stem cell research?

    Opinion (Ethics)Scientific InquiryEthical Responsibility and Integrity
  44. What are the ethical obligations of physicians when pharmaceutical companies offer payments for prescribing or promoting their medications?

    Opinion (Ethics)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityCritical ThinkingReliability and Dependability
  45. Should physician reimbursement shift from fee-for-service to value-based models?

    Opinion (Policy)Critical ThinkingService OrientationEthical Responsibility and Integrity
  46. You discover a classmate is using AI to generate their reflective essays about patient interactions—essays meant to develop empathy and self-awareness. The AI-generated reflections are actually better written and more insightful than most students' authentic ones. They're getting top marks and genuinely learning from reading what the AI produces. What do you do?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityCritical Thinking
  47. Insurance companies in the US sometimes deny coverage for treatments that physicians believe are medically necessary. Physicians must then decide whether to appeal the decision, recommend the patient pay out-of-pocket, or pursue alternative treatments that may be less effective. Do physicians have an ethical obligation to advocate for their patients with insurance companies, even when it requires significant time and effort? Discuss the ethical considerations with the interviewer.

    Opinion (Ethics)Service OrientationEthical Responsibility and IntegrityReliability and Dependability
  48. If you were a fruit, which one would you be and why?

    QuirkyOral CommunicationSocial Competence
  49. Tell me about a time when you recognized a personal limitation or weakness that was affecting your performance. What did you do about it?

    Personal (Behavioral)Capacity for ImprovementReliability and DependabilityCritical Thinking
  50. A viral blog post asserts that "organic diets cure cancer," citing several testimonials from individuals who claim remission after eliminating processed foods. The post criticizes oncologists for "profiting from chemotherapy" and argues that "pharmaceutical science ignores nature's cures." The author includes references to "a study" without citation, and dismisses contradictory data as "corporate propaganda." Evaluate the strength of the arguments presented. What logical or ethical issues arise in promoting such claims to vulnerable populations?

    Opinion (Ethics)Critical ThinkingEthical Responsibility and IntegrityScientific Inquiry
  51. Many rare diseases affect too few people for pharmaceutical companies to profitably develop treatments. Should governments mandate research into rare diseases, redirect funding from common diseases, or accept that resources must be allocated where they help the most people?

    Opinion (Policy)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityCritical ThinkingService Orientation
  52. What do you do if a colleague has a substance abuse problem?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegritySocial Competence
  53. Do you think it's ever ethical to lie to a patient?

    Opinion (Ethics)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityOral CommunicationCritical Thinking
  54. If you could add one law to the laws of physics, what would it be?

    QuirkyOral CommunicationCritical ThinkingScientific Inquiry
  55. What are your strengths?

    Personal (Fit)Oral CommunicationCapacity for Improvement
  56. Should gene editing technologies like CRISPR be used to enhance human traits (not just treat disease) in future generations?

    Opinion (Ethics)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityScientific InquiryCritical Thinking
  57. How do you study?

    Personal (Fit)Capacity for ImprovementCritical Thinking
  58. You are a medical student. A patient with terminal cancer asks you directly, 'How long do I have?' You haven't discussed prognosis with the attending yet. How do you respond?

    SituationalOral CommunicationEthical Responsibility and Integrity
  59. If you were a kitchen appliance, which one would you be and why?

    QuirkyOral CommunicationSocial Competence
  60. What would you do if a colleague comes to work smelling of alcohol?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityReliability and Dependability
  61. A hospital press release promotes its new "AI-assisted triage system," which ranks patients by predicted survival rate to maximize efficiency. The administration reports shorter wait times and fewer administrative errors. However, some staff have noticed that patients from minority backgrounds are systematically ranked lower, potentially due to bias in the training data. Hospital leadership insists that "the algorithm is objective" and that "efficiency is our ethical duty." Critically analyze this justification. What ethical concerns and reasoning flaws might you identify?

    Opinion (Ethics)Critical ThinkingEthical Responsibility and IntegrityCultural Competence
  62. Walk me through a period when you were overwhelmed with responsibilities. How did you use to get through it?

    Personal (Behavioral)Resilience and AdaptabilityReliability and DependabilityCritical Thinking
  63. An economics think tank proposes legalizing the sale of kidneys to reduce transplant waiting lists. They argue that a regulated market would prevent black-market exploitation, compensate donors fairly, and save lives. Critics claim it would commodify the human body and exploit the poor. The report dismisses these objections as "emotional resistance to economic reality." Discuss the logical and ethical merits and weaknesses of this proposal.

    Opinion (Policy)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityCritical ThinkingQuantitative Reasoning
  64. What would you do if a patient refused treatment?

    SituationalEmpathy and CompassionEthical Responsibility and Integrity
  65. What would be the worst superpower to have?

    QuirkyOral CommunicationCritical Thinking
  66. What are physicians' ethical obligations when insurance companies deny coverage for treatments physicians deem medically necessary?

    Opinion (Ethics)Service OrientationEthical Responsibility and IntegrityReliability and Dependability
  67. You accidentally receive an email from your supervisor that contains private performance evaluations, including criticism of a close friend. Later that day, your friend mentions feeling anxious about whether management trusts them. What do you do?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityEmpathy and Compassion
  68. You are a chief resident. You notice an intern consistently dismisses female patients' pain as 'anxiety' while taking male patients' identical symptoms seriously. This intern reports to you. What do you do?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegritySocial Competence
  69. A 16-year-old you recognize as your neighbor's daughter requests emergency contraception at your clinic. She's terrified and begs you not to tell her strict religious parents. She mentions her boyfriend is 19 (potential statutory rape). When you discuss reporting requirements, she threatens self-harm if anyone finds out. What are your competing obligations? What do you do first? What if she insists the relationship is consensual?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityEmpathy and Compassion
  70. You are a physician leading an international medical brigade treating patients in a remote village. Your team has limited medication supplies—specifically, you have enough antibiotics for two patients, but five patients present with bacterial infections that would benefit from treatment. Among them: a pregnant woman with a kidney infection, an elderly man with pneumonia, a child with a severe skin infection, a young adult with an infected surgical wound, and a middle-aged farmer who is the sole income earner for an extended family of eight. Your team member wants to save the medication for 'potentially more critical future cases' since you're there for another week, but the patients in front of you are suffering now and their conditions could worsen without treatment. If you use the antibiotics now, you'll have none left if an emergency arises later. How would you approach this situation? What would you consider?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityCritical ThinkingService Orientation
  71. Who should receive an organ transplant: a convicted felon or an uninsured mother?

    Opinion (Ethics)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityCritical ThinkingService Orientation
  72. Teach me something.

    QuirkyOral CommunicationCapacity for Improvement
  73. In times of resource scarcity—such as limited ICU beds or transplant organs—some argue younger patients should be prioritized because they have more potential years of life. Others claim all lives should be valued equally, regardless of age. Discuss the ethical implications of using age as a factor in allocating scarce medical resources.

    Opinion (Ethics)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityCritical ThinkingService Orientation
  74. Should healthcare professionals be required to receive certain vaccinations?

    Opinion (Policy)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityCritical ThinkingService Orientation
  75. Who is your role model?

    Personal (Fit)Capacity for ImprovementEthical Responsibility and IntegrityOral Communication
  76. What are physicians' ethical obligations when hospital policies prioritize revenue over patient welfare?

    Opinion (Ethics)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityReliability and DependabilityCritical Thinking
  77. Healthcare students learn procedures on real patients. Is this ethical, given that students are less skilled?

    Opinion (Ethics)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityCritical ThinkingService Orientation
  78. What are three words people who know you would use to describe you?

    Personal (Fit)Oral CommunicationSocial CompetenceReliability and Dependability
  79. What controversial healthcare topic are you passionate about?

    Opinion (Ethics)Critical ThinkingService Orientation
  80. Where do you see yourself in 10 years?

    Personal (Fit)Oral CommunicationService Orientation
  81. You accidentally see a text on your roommate's phone suggesting they're cheating on their long-term partner, who is also your friend. What, if anything, do you do?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityEmpathy and CompassionCritical Thinking
  82. Should there be federal regulations limiting the growth of corporate ownership of physician practices?

    Opinion (Policy)Critical ThinkingEthical Responsibility and IntegrityService Orientation
  83. Michigan hospitals report a 13% vacancy rate with 27,000 job openings as of 2023, and 86% of physician practices report staff declines since COVID-19. This shortage affects patient care quality and physician burnout rates. What policy interventions should Michigan prioritize to address these workforce shortages while maintaining care standards?

    Opinion (Policy)Critical ThinkingService OrientationResilience and Adaptability
  84. Should gender-affirming care be available to minors? What factors should be considered?

    Opinion (Ethics)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityEmpathy and CompassionCritical Thinking
  85. Do physicians have an ethical obligation to provide care to uninsured patients beyond emergency stabilization?

    Opinion (Ethics)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityService OrientationReliability and Dependability
  86. How would you fix the healthcare system?

    Opinion (Policy)Critical ThinkingCapacity for Improvement
  87. What would you do if a teenager confides they're being abused at home but begs you not to tell anyone?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityEmpathy and Compassion
  88. Should people with unhealthy lifestyles (e.g., smokers, heavy drinkers) have reduced access to certain treatments?

    Opinion (Ethics)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityCritical ThinkingService Orientation
  89. You're working at an organization when you discover that your mentor—someone who has been instrumental in your development, advocated for you repeatedly, and is genuinely kind—has been quietly discriminating against certain job applicants based on protected characteristics. They're subtle about it (finding 'legitimate' reasons to reject candidates), but the pattern is clear. When you carefully raise concerns, they become defensive and hurt, saying you've misunderstood and that they've 'always supported diversity.' You have documented evidence, but reporting it would likely end their career and damage your own reputation by association. They're also dealing with a family crisis and are in a fragile state. However, their behavior is harming people and perpetuating inequality. What's your responsibility here?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegritySocial Competence
  90. What are your thoughts on the role of private vs. public healthcare?

    Opinion (Policy)Critical ThinkingService Orientation
  91. Should childhood vaccinations be mandatory for school attendance, or should parents have the right to refuse?

    Opinion (Policy)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityCritical ThinkingService Orientation
  92. What would you do if a team member isn’t contributing on a group project?

    SituationalTeamworkOral Communication
  93. A team project wins an award. You and a peer did equal work, but only you were mentioned in the press release. Your supervisor congratulates you publicly. Correcting the record may jeopardize your relationship with them. What do you do?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityOral CommunicationReliability and Dependability
  94. You are a primary care physician. A patient with Medicare comes in needing a specialist. The only specialists accepting new Medicare patients have 6-month waits, while private-pay specialists can see them next week. The patient's condition requires timelier care but they can't afford out-of-pocket costs. What would you do?

    SituationalService OrientationSocial CompetenceEmpathy and Compassion
  95. Convince me that a potato is the most important invention in human history.

    QuirkyOral CommunicationCritical Thinking
  96. Should the US implement stronger regulations on pharmaceutical pricing?

    Opinion (Policy)Critical ThinkingService OrientationEthical Responsibility and Integrity
  97. You are a family physician. A teenage patient experiencing gender dysphoria asks you not to inform their unsupportive parents about treatment options. What would you do?

    SituationalCultural CompetenceEmpathy and CompassionEthical Responsibility and Integrity
  98. Should Michigan physicians be required to complete additional training on rural health challenges before practicing in underserved areas?

    Opinion (Ethics)Capacity for ImprovementCultural CompetenceService Orientation
  99. Tell me about a time you failed.

    Personal (Behavioral)Resilience and AdaptabilityCapacity for Improvement
  100. How might the transition to medical school affect you.

    Personal (Fit)Resilience and AdaptabilityCapacity for Improvement
  101. Is it ethical for pharmaceutical companies to charge high prices for life-saving medications?

    Opinion (Ethics)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityCritical ThinkingService Orientation
  102. What role should technology and AI play in the future of healthcare?

    Opinion (Policy)Critical ThinkingCapacity for Improvement
  103. Should students from disadvantaged backgrounds receive preferential admission to health professions programs?

    Opinion (Ethics)Cultural CompetenceSocial CompetenceEthical Responsibility and Integrity
  104. How does CMU College of Medicine's focus on rural and underserved healthcare align with your career goals?

    Personal (Program)Service OrientationSocial Competence
  105. Is healthcare a right or a privilege?

    Opinion (Ethics)Critical ThinkingService Orientation
  106. You are a medical student on clinical rotation. You accidentally access the wrong patient chart and see that your roommate's parent has a serious illness. Your roommate seems stressed but hasn't mentioned anything. What would you do?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegritySocial Competence
  107. Should medical school be tuition-free in the US?

    Opinion (Policy)Critical ThinkingService OrientationSocial Competence
  108. Tell me about a skill or knowledge area where you've shown significant improvement over time. What was your learning process?

    Personal (Fit)Capacity for ImprovementResilience and AdaptabilityCritical Thinking
  109. What would you do if you caught a classmate cheating?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityReliability and Dependability
  110. What would you do if someone in a group project falsified data?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityScientific Inquiry
  111. What is an ethical dilemma you have faced?

    Personal (Behavioral)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityCritical ThinkingHuman Behavior
  112. Is it ethical for Michigan medical schools to accept out-of-state students when there's a documented physician shortage affecting Michigan residents?

    Opinion (Ethics)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityService OrientationCritical Thinking
  113. Michigan is projected to be short 862 primary care physicians by 2030, with only 252 residency slots available annually and 45.2% of residents leaving the state after training. Meanwhile, 25% of current Michigan doctors are age 60 or older and approaching retirement. Given these workforce projections, how should Michigan restructure its medical education and residency programs to better retain physicians within the state?

    Opinion (Policy)Critical ThinkingService OrientationCapacity for Improvement
  114. Tell me about a time you experienced a team conflict and how you resolved it.

    Personal (Behavioral)TeamworkOral Communication
  115. Michigan has extensive Health Professional Shortage Areas, particularly in rural regions like the Upper Peninsula where only 15 hospitals exist and many offer limited services. The state offers loan forgiveness and scholarship programs, but physician distribution remains uneven. Should Michigan implement mandatory service requirements for physicians who receive state-funded education benefits?

    Opinion (Policy)Critical ThinkingService OrientationEthical Responsibility and Integrity
  116. If you had to be a piece of furniture in a hospital, what would you be?

    QuirkyOral CommunicationService Orientation
  117. If you could have dinner with anyone, who and why?

    QuirkyOral CommunicationSocial Competence
  118. Tell me about a time you had a disagreement with a teammate, supervisor, or friend.

    Personal (Behavioral)TeamworkOral Communication
  119. How do you relate to our mission?

    Personal (Program)Service OrientationOral CommunicationSocial Competence
  120. What will you do if you do not get into medical school?

    Personal (Fit)Resilience and AdaptabilityOral Communication
  121. What aspects of CMU College of Medicine's mission to address physician shortages in Michigan resonate with you?

    Personal (Program)Service OrientationSocial Competence
  122. If you could choose one superpower what would it be?

    QuirkyOral CommunicationSocial Competence
  123. You discover a colleague has been embellishing their credentials—claiming degrees from prestigious schools when they actually graduated from less-known programs. They're exceptionally good at their job, patients love them, and outcomes are excellent. But they lied on their application. Do you report it? What if they came from poverty and believed (possibly correctly) they'd never get hired without prestigious credentials?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegritySocial Competence
  124. You're leading a student health initiative when you discover that a fellow student leader has been embezzling small amounts of money from the organization's budget over several months (totaling about $2,000). When you confront them, they admit it but explain that their family was evicted and they needed money for food and supplies for their younger siblings. They're the first in their family to attend university and are working two jobs while maintaining a 3.9 GPA. They're devastated and ashamed, offer to pay it back over time, and beg you not to report it because it would mean expulsion and loss of their scholarship. Your organization's constitution requires reporting any financial irregularities to the dean. What do you do?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityEmpathy and Compassion
  125. A colleague you respect makes a dismissive comment toward a patient from a marginalized background. You know confronting them could damage your working relationship. What do you do?

    SituationalCultural CompetenceEthical Responsibility and IntegrityOral Communication
  126. While volunteering at a community center, a family refuses to vaccinate their children due to religious beliefs. The father quietly tells you he disagrees but fears community backlash if he consents. What do you do?

    SituationalCultural CompetenceCultural HumilityEmpathy and Compassion
  127. How many golf balls fit in an airplane?

    QuirkyCritical ThinkingQuantitative ReasoningOral Communication
  128. How does CMU College of Medicine's small class size appeal to your learning preferences?

    Personal (Program)Capacity for ImprovementSocial Competence
  129. Describe a situation where you had to navigate cultural differences in a team or work environment.

    Personal (Behavioral)Cultural CompetenceTeamwork
  130. What are Central Michigan University College of Medicine's values?

    Personal (Program)Oral CommunicationService Orientation
  131. Should patients have the right to request a healthcare provider of a specific gender, race, or cultural background?

    Opinion (Ethics)Cultural CompetenceCritical Thinking
  132. Tell me about a time when you had to explain a complex scientific concept to someone without a science background. How did you approach it?

    Personal (Behavioral)Oral CommunicationSocial Competence
  133. What is your biggest regret?

    Personal (Fit)Capacity for ImprovementEthical Responsibility and IntegrityHuman Behavior
  134. Can compassion be taught?

    Opinion (Ethics)Empathy and CompassionCritical ThinkingCapacity for Improvement
  135. Is it ethically acceptable for Michigan physicians to limit their practice to patients with private insurance when Medicaid patients face longer wait times?

    Opinion (Ethics)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityService OrientationCritical Thinking
  136. What is the biggest problem in healthcare today?

    Opinion (Policy)Critical ThinkingService Orientation
  137. What attracts you to CMU College of Medicine's emphasis on community-based medical education?

    Personal (Program)Service OrientationCapacity for Improvement
  138. Tell me about a time you exhibited leadership.

    Personal (Behavioral)TeamworkOral Communication
  139. You’re working in a research lab when you discover that your supervisor has failed to report a conflict of interest—he’s consulting for the company funding the study. You depend on him for a strong reference for grad school. What do you do?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityScientific Inquiry
  140. Medical school in the US is extremely expensive, with graduates often carrying $200,000+ in debt. Some have proposed making medical education free or significantly subsidized in exchange for service requirements in underserved areas. Should the US provide free or subsidized medical education in exchange for service commitments? Consider the implications for physician distribution and healthcare access. Discuss with the interviewer.

    Opinion (Policy)Critical ThinkingService OrientationCapacity for Improvement
  141. What do you think are important qualities for a doctor?

    Personal (Fit)Critical ThinkingReliability and DependabilityEthical Responsibility and Integrity
  142. As AI becomes better at diagnosis than human doctors, should we rely more on AI decision-making?

    Opinion (Ethics)Critical ThinkingScientific InquiryCapacity for Improvement
  143. How do you handle stress?

    Personal (Fit)Resilience and AdaptabilityOral Communication
  144. What is your biggest fear?

    Personal (Fit)Resilience and AdaptabilityOral CommunicationHuman Behavior
  145. What makes you special?

    Personal (Fit)Oral CommunicationSocial CompetenceService Orientation
  146. You are a resident physician. A patient's insurance requires prior authorization for a medication they need urgently. The authorization process typically takes 3-5 days, but the patient is in significant pain now. The insurance company's after-hours line says there's nothing they can do until business hours tomorrow. What would you do?

    SituationalService OrientationEmpathy and CompassionCritical Thinking
  147. You're at a party and a friend insists on driving herself home, even though she has been drinking. What do you do?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegritySocial Competence
  148. A close friend in your study group admits they copied answers from another student on a recent exam but asks you not to tell anyone. How do you respond?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityOral Communication
  149. What is your favorite movie?

    QuirkyOral CommunicationSocial Competence
  150. You're on a scholarship committee choosing between two equally qualified finalists: Candidate A overcame homelessness and foster care (first in family to attend university), Candidate B has a disability and spent years advocating for accessibility (worked three times harder than peers for same grades). You can only choose one. Another committee member reveals Candidate A's essay was heavily edited by a mentor, while B's is entirely their own work. Who do you choose?

    SituationalCritical ThinkingEthical Responsibility and Integrity
  151. What is your learning style?

    Personal (Fit)Capacity for ImprovementCritical ThinkingScientific Inquiry
  152. What would you do if a group member isn't doing their part?

    SituationalTeamworkOral Communication
  153. Why are you specifically interested in attending CMU College of Medicine rather than other medical schools?

    Personal (Program)Oral CommunicationCapacity for Improvement
  154. You are a physician. A patient refuses a blood transfusion due to religious beliefs, even though it's medically necessary and they'll likely die without it. Their family is pressuring them to accept treatment. What do you do?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityEmpathy and Compassion
  155. Describe a moment when you connected with someone who was going through a difficult time.

    Personal (Behavioral)Empathy and CompassionSocial CompetenceOral Communication
  156. You see a friend post misleading health information on social media that’s getting lots of attention. How do you handle it?

    SituationalOral CommunicationEthical Responsibility and IntegritySocial Competence
  157. What would you do if a coworker is taking credit for your work on a group project.

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityTeamwork
  158. You're managing a small rural health center during a severe flu outbreak. You have 10 doses of antiviral medication left, but 25 high-risk patients need it. Among those waiting: elderly nursing home residents, pregnant women, healthcare workers who are essential to keep the clinic running, children with asthma, and adults caring for disabled family members. How do you decide who receives the medication?

    SituationalCritical ThinkingEthical Responsibility and Integrity
  159. You are a physician working in a rural clinic when a family brings in their 8-year-old daughter for a routine checkup. While examining her, you notice patterns of bruising on her arms and legs that concern you—some appear to be in different stages of healing. When you gently inquire, the parents explain that she's very active in gymnastics and 'always covered in bruises from practice.' They seem like a loving family and their explanation is plausible. However, the pattern and location of some bruises are atypical for gymnastics injuries. Your clinic partner, who has practiced in this small community for 20 years, is close friends with this family and has never had concerns. You're new to the clinic and don't want to damage relationships or make false accusations, but you're also aware that abuse can happen in any family and that failing to report suspected abuse has serious consequences. What would you consider? What are your next steps?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityService Orientation
  160. What interests you about the clinical training opportunities at CMU College of Medicine's distributed campus model?

    Personal (Program)Capacity for ImprovementCritical Thinking
  161. How would living and studying in Mount Pleasant impact your medical education experience?

    Personal (Program)Resilience and AdaptabilityCapacity for Improvement
  162. What would you do if a patient's family requests you not tell the patient about their diagnosis?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityEmpathy and Compassion
  163. Should healthcare workers strike if working conditions are unsafe for them or their patients?

    Opinion (Ethics)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityCritical ThinkingService Orientation
  164. A government report suggests reducing hospital electricity usage by lowering air conditioning levels, switching to biodegradable single-use instruments, and restricting high-energy medical imaging for non-urgent cases. Officials claim this is necessary to meet carbon neutrality goals. Critics warn that such policies could endanger patient safety and comfort. Critically examine this policy's reasoning. How should public health balance environmental responsibility and patient care?

    Opinion (Policy)Critical ThinkingEthical Responsibility and IntegrityService Orientation
  165. The American Medical Association describes medically futile treatments as those having 'no reasonable chance of benefiting the patient.' Even when continued medical interventions for a dying patient will be futile, families sometimes insist that care be continued. In some states, futility laws authorize doctors to overrule the patient's family. Do you believe that a physician should have the authority to overrule a family's wishes if treatment is medically futile? What ethical principles are at stake? Discuss your opinion with the interviewer.

    Opinion (Ethics)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityCritical ThinkingEmpathy and Compassion
  166. There are ongoing debates in the US about implementing a single-payer healthcare system similar to Canada's, often called 'Medicare for All.' This would provide universal coverage but would require significant tax increases and would eliminate private health insurance. Do you think the US should implement a single-payer healthcare system? Consider the implications for access, quality, and cost. Discuss with the interviewer.

    Opinion (Policy)Critical ThinkingService OrientationSocial Competence
  167. Tell me about a time you had to advocate for someone who wasn’t being heard.

    Personal (Behavioral)Service OrientationOral Communication
  168. You discover a popular local business (a major employer and your organization's biggest donor) is illegally dumping chemicals likely causing elevated cancer rates. You have preliminary but not conclusive data. Going public might cause panic and lawsuits that destroy your organization's funding (affecting 500 families). Waiting for conclusive evidence (2-3 years) means more exposure. What do you do?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityCritical Thinking
  169. How would you explain the internet to someone from the 1800s?

    QuirkyOral CommunicationCritical Thinking
  170. What was the most difficult decision you have ever had to make?

    Personal (Behavioral)Critical ThinkingEthical Responsibility and IntegrityHuman Behavior
  171. Indigenous communities often have distrust of mainstream healthcare. How should the healthcare system address historical harms and build trust?

    Opinion (Policy)Cultural CompetenceCultural HumilitySocial Competence
  172. Undocumented immigrants in the US often avoid seeking medical care due to fear of deportation, even for serious conditions. When undocumented patients do seek care, they typically lack insurance and cannot afford treatment. Do physicians have an ethical obligation to provide free or reduced-cost care to undocumented immigrants? What ethical principles should guide this decision? Discuss your position with the interviewer.

    Opinion (Ethics)Service OrientationCultural CompetenceEthical Responsibility and Integrity
  173. In the US healthcare system, physicians working in for-profit hospitals may face pressure to maximize revenue through increased patient volume, ordering more procedures, or admitting patients who could be treated outpatient. When hospital administration pressures physicians to make decisions that increase revenue but may not be in patients' best interests, what are the physician's ethical obligations? Discuss with the interviewer.

    Opinion (Ethics)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityReliability and DependabilityCritical Thinking
  174. What is one of your strengths in a leadership role?

    Personal (Fit)Oral CommunicationTeamworkSocial Competence
  175. A friend owes you $200 from three months ago and keeps avoiding the topic. Now they're posting on social media about an expensive concert they just attended. How do you address this?

    SituationalOral CommunicationSocial Competence
  176. The US has proposed allowing Medicare to negotiate drug prices directly with pharmaceutical companies, which is currently prohibited by law. Proponents argue this would lower costs for seniors, while opponents worry it could reduce pharmaceutical innovation. Should Medicare be allowed to negotiate drug prices? Discuss the implications of this policy with the interviewer.

    Opinion (Policy)Critical ThinkingService OrientationEthical Responsibility and Integrity
  177. You can eliminate one color from existence. Which one and why?

    QuirkyOral CommunicationCritical Thinking
  178. During a public health crisis, when is it appropriate to mandate masks, lockdowns, or quarantines? Where should individual freedom end?

    Opinion (Policy)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityCritical ThinkingService Orientation
  179. What would you do if you won the lottery tomorrow?

    QuirkyOral CommunicationSocial Competence
  180. What do you do for fun?

    Personal (Fit)Oral CommunicationResilience and Adaptability
  181. A classmate you barely know asks to copy your homework, explaining they've been dealing with a family emergency and haven't had time to complete it. What do you do?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityEmpathy and Compassion
  182. You are a resident physician shadowing in the emergency department when a patient arrives unconscious after a car accident. Their wallet contains a 'Do Not Resuscitate' card, but their adult child, who just arrived, is frantically demanding that everything possible be done to save them. The child says, 'My parent was depressed when they signed that—they didn't really mean it. You have to help them!' The attending physician looks to the team for input before proceeding. Meanwhile, the patient's condition is deteriorating and a decision needs to be made quickly. What factors would you consider? What would you do?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityEmpathy and Compassion
  183. Describe a time when you identified an unfair policy or practice and took action to address it.

    Personal (Behavioral)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityService Orientation
  184. The US is experiencing a primary care physician shortage, particularly in rural areas. Some have proposed expanding the role of nurse practitioners to practice independently without physician oversight, while physician groups argue this could compromise care quality. Should nurse practitioners be allowed to practice independently in all states? Consider the implications for access and quality of care. Discuss with the interviewer.

    Opinion (Policy)Critical ThinkingService OrientationSocial Competence
  185. What is the difference between sympathy and empathy?

    QuirkyEmpathy and CompassionOral Communication
  186. One in five Michigan adults lacks access to primary care, and 8% of children have no source of primary or preventative healthcare. Rural areas are particularly affected, with some counties lacking any doctors at all. Given Michigan's geographic and population distribution challenges, how should the state balance promoting telemedicine expansion with ensuring adequate in-person care access?

    Opinion (Policy)Critical ThinkingService OrientationCapacity for Improvement
  187. You’re catching a ride home from a friend who begins texting while driving. When you ask them to stop, they brush you off and say, “Relax, I do this all the time.” How do you respond?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityOral Communication
  188. If you could instantly master one skill, what would it be?

    QuirkyOral CommunicationCapacity for Improvement
  189. You’re walking out of a coffee shop when you notice someone drop their wallet. You pick it up and realize there’s a large amount of cash inside, but no ID. You also notice the person quickly leaving in a taxi before you can call out. What do you do?

    SituationalEthical Responsibility and IntegrityCritical Thinking
  190. What was your most challenging experience?

    Personal (Behavioral)Resilience and AdaptabilityCritical ThinkingCapacity for Improvement
  191. If you were a soup, what kind would you be?

    QuirkyOral CommunicationEmpathy and Compassion
  192. Is it ethical for Michigan to recruit foreign-trained physicians to address workforce shortages while immigration barriers prevent many qualified doctors from practicing?

    Opinion (Ethics)Ethical Responsibility and IntegrityCultural CompetenceService Orientation
  193. How many rubber ducks would it take to fill this room?

    QuirkyCritical ThinkingQuantitative Reasoning

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