Your academics are fine.
I have a daughter who is studying for a DVM. She is very solidly on track to be a doctor in May (in three months). Admittedly her patients will be large animals. However, the process is similar to the process of becoming a doctor for humans, and the difficulty of getting accepted to an MD or DO program is similar to the difficulty of getting accepted to a DVM program. The required undergraduate classes are the exact same classes. Her SAT was very good, and was only slightly lower than yours. The same is true of her high school GPA. I think that she had about the same number of APs that you have (if I have remembered correctly).
I also note that you have taken AP biology, and have taken a high school course in both physics and chemistry, and up through pre-calculus. All of these will be helpful. Speaking some Spanish is also helpful for someone going into health care. Speaking Spanish close to fluently would be helpful if you can get there (although this is of course not necessary).
I have said a few times that my daughter’s academics were strong, but it was her determination and experience in a relevant (veterinary in her case) environment that got her accepted to multiple very good programs, and that has so far has gotten her through the program that she is currently in.
Your academics are fine. Finding the determination to make it through 8 years of university, and finding a way to pay for it, are going to be the two main challenges.
You need to keep the cost down for your bachelor’s degree. If it is possible then you should avoid debt, or at least keep your level of debt down to the federal government subsidized level (which I think might be $5,500 for your first year of university).
I was wondering why URI was not on your list. Wheaton is also a very good choice for a premed student. If you costs are the same then it would just come down to which school you feel would be a better fit for you, and I guess that you decided Wheaton is the answer to this question. I just took a very quick look at the premed program at Wheaton and it looks solid to me.
I do not think that I would go anywhere that is more expensive compared to Wheaton, unless you can do this with no debt. You should find out pretty soon whether you will get other equally affordable options.
My other daughter (the one is is getting a PhD in a biomedical field, rather than a DVM) attended a small university for her bachelor’s degree. One thing that she mentioned was that she had small classes and got to know her professors. This can be quite helpful in multiple ways. In her case it helped her get research opportunities. Of course the same advantages of small classes will be true at Wheaton. I would expect this might also help you get other types of opportunities (possibly including premed shadowing opportunities).
You have a very long list of schools that you have applied to. I expect that you will get some other acceptances. Most likely you will get some acceptances that are just not affordable. If you get an acceptance that is not affordable, then just say NO and do not be tempted to go there. Wheaton or U.Mass can prepare you very well for medical school, or for a PhD in a biomedical field, or for a wide range of other careers.
Premed classes will be tough at any school on your list. Some classes will be tougher than others, but which classes you find toughest might be different compared to some other student. As one example, my daughter who is getting a DVM found organic chemistry to be quite tough, but breezed though calculus and physics and considered them to be solid A’s to help offset the B and the B- in organic chemistry. Some other student might be the other way around. A different student might breeze though organic chemistry and find biochem to be tough.
At any school on your list, these premed classes will be full of very strong students. It is not clear that coming into Harvard or Princeton in the middle or bottom half of the incoming students will improve your chances at all compared to arriving at Wheaton or U.Mass coming in as a student in the top half of the incoming class, and you will need to work very hard to stay in the top half.
The students in very good MD programs, and DO programs, and biomedical PhD programs, come from a very wide range of undergraduate universities. You can do very well with a degree from any university on your list. You should plan to work very hard in university and make a very strong effort to stay well ahead in every class. Choose a school that is affordable and that is a good fit for you, and do not pay any attention to rankings or “prestige”. Rankings and prestige will not get you accepted to MD programs nor to any other graduate programs. Doing very well at a school that is a good fit for you will help you get accepted to good MD or graduate programs, and picking an affordable university to attend will help you to be able to afford to pay for all of this.
Best wishes.