You also have excellent universities in Texas, both public and, well, Rice. I assume there are other great private schools there as well but living in a far away corner of the US “public and Rice” is what I know of (perhaps Baylor also). You also have some great medical schools in Texas.
I agree with other comments that UCLA and UC Berkeley do not seem like good choices if you want to keep open the option of medical school. On the one hand they would be very expensive. They are also large universities and you will start with large classes, which does not help you get to know your professors and get medical volunteer opportunities. Also, I thought that they were known for at least a little bit of grade deflation. I would leave both off the list.
I am not a fan of reach schools if you are premed. I understand that Harvard gets a higher percentage of its students into medical school that UT Dallas does (or at least I expect that it does), however most of this is because of the sort of student who comes out of high school and starts at Harvard. For any one strong student, it is probably at least as good a strategy to arrive near the top of the incoming freshman class at UT Dallas or Austin rather than come in near the middle or bottom of the incoming freshman class at a famous top ranked university. Expect premed classes to be very tough at any good university (including any “top 200” university in the US). Both daughters had majors that overlap with premed and I have heard plenty of stories of exams with class averages in the mid 40’s (both daughters did beat the class averages in these cases, but a lot of very strong students did not). One daughter went to a university that was not a reach, excelled, got great volunteer opportunities, and had great results with DVM admissions and will start a DVM program in September. She had to work very hard however.
A wild idea on the east coast is UVM (University of Vermont). Your GPA would probably get you a merit scholarship and is has a good premed program plus a hospital on campus. However, I do not see any reason to prefer it to the excellent universities in Texas.