Hard.
No. You can get your undergraduate from Brigham Young University and then transfer to a medical school, if you would like. Many from BYU apply to medical school at the University of Utah.
A pharmacist can earn a medical degree by going back to school. They would have to apply to medical school, get accepted, and finish medical school to earn their medical degree just like anyone else who wants to be a physician.
MD is a medical doctor, they went to medical school. An RN is a registered nurse, they like the doctor went to college but did not attend medical school, instead a special nursing school.
pre-med isn't a major its more like a list of extra classes that are required to apply to medical school
The best medical transcription school looks like triOS College. They have several locations in Ontarion from Brampton, London, and Toronto.
Legally no. But you can ask the school's nurse for an application for medical problems. Like if you have headaches you can go to the school nurse and get a Tylenol or something like that. But otherwise no.
A college with medical programs is a "medical school".
It doesn't really work like that; anaesthetists are specialists, who have done postgraduate training after medical school. Your medical school won't impact your specialty training - only hard work can do that!
No, medical school is the graduate school for medicine.
about 3 years then like 6 to specialize
Medical School to get your MD, then you have to specialize which is even more medical school Medical School to get your MD, then you have to specialize which is even more medical school
medical school is a school that specialises in medical training, no matter how difficult