Sounds like you are leaping before you look. In another thread you listed your ECs as
So it doesn’t sound like you have any actual paid or volunteer experience in health care. But you’ve settled on being a doctor.
Experience in a health-care setting is an an unwritten requirement of medical school admissions. Some other programs such as physician assistant or physical therapist have actual hour requirements just to apply.
Another clue you haven’t spent much time looking into how one becomes a doctor. A generation ago research was a key to med school admission and it remains part of the lore of what HS kids think they need to do while in college. Spend a few minutes reading thru https://www.rhodes.edu/sites/default/files/PreMed_Essentials.pdf and see what pre-med advisors say about research & experience.
Being a doctor is a respected profession. But many HS kids have a hazy dream of how wonderful it would be to be a doctor without taking the time to explore the career first. And its fun to tell friends and family “I’m going to be a doctor!”
Before you get all wrapped up in choosing a premed school and planning your college electives so they fit your chosen medical school it would be a good idea to get some actual exposure to health care. And even if you still see yourself working in the field you should be considering alternatives that don’t involve 11+ years of school/training from where you are now and heavy debt. Doctors are far from the only ones in the health field that help people. Physical therapists, radiology techs, nurses, speech pathologists, physician assistants, and many others earn a good living in health care as you can see on http://explorehealthcareers.org