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There is some thought/evidence that adcoms taking nursing degree and then directly applying to medical school shows lack of commitment (ie do you want to be a doctor or do you want to be a nurse). The conventional "wisdom" that advisors and admissions officer suggest is to work as few years as a nurse prior to applying to med school. If your ultimate goal is to be a doctor then the masters in medical science, or SMP should be looked as a prep school/audition for that. I would suggest that masters would be more appropriate.
I am a first time applicant currently on the wait at a couple of schools. At this point I am unsure whether to pursue one of these 1 year Masters in Medical Science, which is a degree which other than for the purposes of improving your academic record/showing you can handle Medical School classes, is just a minor 'means to an end' -- unless you plan on continuing to develop a career as level 1 or 2 research associate; Or, instead of the 1 year MS in Medical Science, doing a 1 year accelerated bachelors in nursing degree.
Both carry the consequence of a 2 year window before potentially matriculating (1 year to earn a new degree+additional meaningful ECs ALONG with 1 year of the application cycle). Most resources on the internet including schools recommend following this route of a 2 year time off to polish your application.
Alternatively, I'm tempted to just resubmit my AMCAS and study for the MCAT for a couple months more and see if I can improve my score -- I know I can with some more time with practice exams.
Any suggestions?