I absolutely agree with Cain that "FIT" should be a major consideration when choosing med-schools to go to.
I was one of those individuals who chose a great medical school but knew a month into it that this was not the place for me. For example, I was told repeatedly on multiple rotations that my demeanor and personality is too much like a surgeon and I actually got dinged for this in my evals (under the guise of "bed side manners"). Interestingly, on my Medicine, Pediatrics and Neurology rotations, patients told my attendings and residents that I had great bed side manners which they included in the comments section but still dinged me in the rating section.
Before choosing to go to a state school, you NEED to find out what their objectives are. For instance, is the school getting funds to churn out primary care docs? If you want to go into ortho, this might not be the best place for you.
My school will always claim that they match well in surg-sub (and yes they do) BUT the road getting there is NOT pretty. And I believe the numbers are too low for that calibar of med-school. If you decide on a surg-sub, you are essentially on your own as opposed to getting the red carpet laid out for you when you decide to go into medicine.
When I was deciding on medschools, I had a conversation with a neurosurgeon at the school I am going to. This guy told me that his son goes to another school with a "slighty" greater emphasis on specialties but you can go into specialties here as well... blah, blah, blah. Why would his son, who also wanted to be a neurosurgeon, go to a lower-ranked private school and pay tuition there as opposed to get free tuition at a "better" school? This was probably the biggest hint anyone could have given me but as a dumb pre-med, I didnt know how to process this.