Abstract: | In the fall of 1964, newspaper accounts of the medical school applicant situation in Canada reported that hundreds of fully qualified applicants were being turned away because of shortage of places. Such reports precipitated a pilot study of the applications received by the four Ontario medical schools for the first professional year of medicine and it was found, first of all, that the total of 1352 applications represented only 880 individuals. Nearly 32% of these applicants were American and 18% were citizens of Commonwealth or other countries. While a majority of the applicants met the minimal requirements of the schools, very few of the rejected applicants had academic records that justified admission when the informal standards of the schools were applied. It was concluded that it is erroneous to speak of a surplus of well-qualified applicants at the present time and that the need for recruiting programs still remains. |