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Thursday
Oct062011

Calling All MD / MBAs! Boston University Needs You For A Survey.

Boston University is conducting an important survey of MD/MBAs to collect information on careers, satisfaction, and income.

If you have both an MD and an MBA degree, please take 5-10 minutes to complete the survey at the link below. Please forward this email to anyone you know who has both degrees, whether or not they are a Freelance MD member.

Respondents must have both an MD and MBA degree

TAKE THE SURVEY HERE

There are 5 sections with 29 questions.

  1. Background information
  2. Medical licensure
  3. Clinical training
  4. Income
  5. Career satisfaction

It should only take you 5 - 10 minutes to compete and it's anonymous. However, we will share the results with interested respondents if they provide us their email in Q. 27

Thank you!

N. STEPHEN OBER, MD, MBA
Director, MD/MBA Dual Degree Program Boston University School of Medicine
715 Albany Street (mail) 80 East Concord Street, Room A-503 (office)
Boston, MA 02118
(617) 645-3193
sober@bu.edu

http://www.bumc.bu.edu/admissions/programs/md-mba/

Wednesday
Oct052011

Leading An Organic Life

With the rise of genetically modified food, chemical exposures and hormonal overload, it is becoming increasingly more and more difficult to lead an all-natural, organic life.

I am an Organic Medicine physician having the privilege to help my patients get off their medicines and clean up their lives. This is not always an easy process, but it is always rewarding.

Let's face it, we live at a time when there are more chemicals and hormones in our environment than we, as humans, have ever been been exposed to. Many chronic medical problems from cancer to weight gain to chronic fatigue are the result of these influences on ourselves.

Whether we like it (or even believe in it), the environment we interact with has a direct effect on how we feel and how we age.

Click to read more ...

Sunday
Oct022011

The Medical Fusion Conference

Discover all of the options available to you as a physician.

The Medical Fusion Conference is a unique event that allows clinical physicians the opportunity to learn about unique niches where they can apply their clinical knowledge.  Learn more about the Medical Fusion Conference in the following video:

Medical Fusion isn't just another conference where you're sitting around and listening to an endless parade of speakers that lecture from behind a podium. Instead, you'll have every opportunity to talk to any speaker you're interested in learning more from. Our Accelerator Sessions are a perfect chance to make connections and deep-dive into the areas that are of interest to you.

You can view more videos on our Freelance MD YouTube Channel

More about our Accelerator Sessions

 

What are physicians saying about attending Medical Fusion?

Sunday
Oct022011

A Physicians Primer To International Travel

If you plan to travel overseas or even across the borders into Mexico or Canada, your plans need to include foresight and caution if you want to enjoy a hassle-free and healthy trip.

Knowledge about public health issues such as advisories, vaccines, environmental hazards and natural disasters and weather can eliminate surprises in your travel and help you be prepared in case you need to travel despite warnings. This primer can help you pinpoint your responsibilities and can make your travel plans easier by providing topics to heed and links to more expansive information about international travel.

To simplify your efforts, you might ask yourself the following questions and seek answers for your specific travel plans:

  1. Do you need a passport and visa? If you’re traveling across U.S. borders, this information is helpful in your identification and can ease travel snags. You may need to plan for these documents up to six months before you travel.
  2. Do you need immunizations or vaccines? Learn this information, ideally, about two months before your trip.
  3. Do you have any health issues that you need to address before travel? Learn more about what you may need for your current health issues and about other problems that you may encounter during your trip. This site also contains information about travel kits you might pack to address specific problems.

Other issues include whether or not you need travel insurance and if your destination is under any travel advisories or warnings. These advisories can occur at the last minute, even on the day you plan to leave…so plan ahead.

About Travel Advisories

Advisories are public notices issued by government agencies to provide information about the relative safety of traveling to and from foreign shores. Advisories can range from epidemics to natural disasters and from environmental issues to political upheavals. If your travel is necessary, be sure to check with officials locally and learn about the consulate available at your destination so you are prepared with a plan of action.

Note that advisories issued from the United States Department of State are called warden messages. U.S. embassies or consulates within foreign countries may issues advisories, which then are relayed to the U.S. Department of State and broadcast to U.S. citizens. The U.S. Department of State provides a list of U.S. embassies, consulates and diplomatic mission Web sites that you can peruse well before you plan your trip.

Traveling With Others

Finally, traveling with the elderly or with children poses special problems. Learn more about how you can make the trip enjoyable for yourself and for your companions. Everyone who travels with you must follow the same immunization plans, obtain passports and heed the same advisories. But, other issues may occur that you cannot possibly fathom. Web sites devoted to these issues, such as International Travel, Passports, Visas and Children & Family Issues can help you iron out those problems in advance.

Finally, the following list of ten excellent international travel sites can help you determine what you need to do when you make your plans.

Governmental Travel Health Links

  1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Travelers’ Health: The CDC is interested in saving lives, protecting people and saving money through prevention. They offer topics that range from information about destinations to vaccinations, diseases a way to find a clinic and resources and training.
  2. Foreign & Commonwealth Office Travel & living abroad: The country advice offered by this UK site is full of useful information for countries throughout the world. The Foreign & Commonwealth Office offers support to UK travelers in emergencies, and a range of services for businesses including document legislation.
  3. Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada Traveling and Living Abroad: This guide out of the Canadian government offers travel reports and warnings, information about consular services and more positive outlooks such as how to handle children and travel and a safe travel planner.
  4. Government of Western Australia Department of Health’s Healthy International Travel: This link leads to information from another perspective half a world away. Look at how this governmental health agency approaches international travel risks.
  5. U.S. Department of Homeland Security Transportation Security Administration: The Transportation Security Administration protects the Nation’s transportation systems to ensure freedom of movement for people and commerce. Although the TSA has come under fire recently for various harsh measures on travelers, they provide information on this site to help make your encounters with TSA more tolerable.
  6. U.S. Department of State Travel: A quick and easy guide to worldwide caution, including travel warnings and alerts, is provided in the left column on this intensive overseas travel site. Other helpful information includes tips for traveling abroad, advice for older travelers, and information about child abduction to child adoption.
  7. U.S. Department of State Bureau of Diplomatic Security: OSAC provides daily news, reports, events and incidents that can effect travelers and expatriates. They include a resource library and searches by countries and cities.

Other Helpful Travel Links

  1. International SOS [PDF]: This document contains information about a 24-hour worldwide assistance and emergency evacuation service for travelers and expatriates. Only members enrolled through a corporate membership or standard group members and paid for by the subscriber are eligible for services.
  2. Johns Hopkins Travel Center: This site is maintained by Supply Chain Shared Services and has been developed to provide faculty and staff with up-to-date information regarding University travel policies, services, and information. Look for travel warnings, useful sites and information about various agencies.
  3. Nations Online: Nations Online Project collects travel warnings around the world to help travelers and citizens to take their own decisions about their travel plans.
  4. UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health Office of Global Health Travel Requirements for UNC Public Health Students: Although intended for public health students, this page carries some great tips and information for anyone who travels. Scroll down the page to find a list of necessary items to take when traveling.
  5. World Health Organization’s Travel and Health: WHO carries general information about how to travel safely and provides specific information on infectious diseases and current updates on international health regulations. They also approach various issues such as food safety in attempts to educate the traveling public.

About: Jennifers blog is at http://mphdegree.org/blog/

Submit a guest post and be heard

Sunday
Oct022011

Healthcare Reform & Frequent Flyers

Healtcare Reform & DoctorsBy Mehul Sheth D.O.

I find it fascinating when elegant solutions transcend their original purpose.

For example, Dr. Atul Gawande writes about applying a checklist to medicine. In the world of flying, the checklist is used to help reduce the number of errors. The thinking is simple-for every eventuality in the cockpit there is a flow diagram, based on best practices, to resolve the issue. They range from the mundane-taking off-to the scary-aircraft stall. Mostly because of this process airlines have taken leaps and bounds and are considered the safest mode of transportation. Dr. Gawande writes a great exposition in The Checklist Manifesto on how the same theory done prior to each surgical procedure can help eliminate simple mistakes in the OR.

As I thought about this I realized that the airline industry has yet more to teach us. As an inner city primary care pediatrician I was dragged in two directions. On the one side was the ideal of providing health care to everyone regardless of income. On the other was the lack of interest interposed with the gross misuse of the system. We have the world’s greatest healthcare infrastructure, but the utilization has been horrific. I blame much of this on a disconnect between the cost of healthcare and the value of healthcare. What I mean is that most folks, until recently, didn’t see the cost of their doctor’s visits. They paid a premium every month regardless of their utilization of the system. The value became clear if they had a cardiac bypass or other procedures, but the value of primary care was hard to gauge. In the end the more that those procedures cost, the more that they valued their healthcare.

The medical atmosphere is clear now-we need to prevent disease in order to bring down costs. The cost of our system is dragging down the country as a whole. The only question is how do you put value back into primary care medicine? By playing games! As a regular traveler, I have learned the rules of an important game-the frequent flyer program. Overall it’s pretty simple-based on your usage of a particular airline, you attain status that grant you perks. It’s simple, but folks are crazy about their status.

Translate this principle to the medical world. The more you participate in preventative care, the more “perks” you get out of the system. Everyone gets basic healthcare, but above that you could have three tiers, let’s call them silver, gold and platinum. The rules to attain the different levels need to be simple. An annual physical exam gets you to silver level. Completing all your screening tests gets you to gold. Striving for and/or achieving certain known risk factor reducers, such as not smoking and maintain a healthy weight, gets you to platinum. The tiers would relate to how much of medical costs are covered. Silver covers 50%, Gold covers 75% and Platinum 100%. In addition, the level of coverage also increases, until the top level allows you the “executive” health care plan that includes things such are personal trainers, massage therapists and other “elite” benefits. You could also bring in theories from other successful games such as Foursquare. Different accomplishments grant you badges that you can show off to other players with pride.

Although this is being done on a lower level with wellness plans and certain insurance companies reducing premiums based on screening lab test completed, the tie between the input into the system doesn’t match the output. In our frequent patient game doing things that make you healthy will grant you perks that will keep you healthy. It’s a simple concept, but anyone who flies regularly knows that it’s a powerful motivator!

About: Mehul Sheth DO is a physician executive with Allscripts and career coach. He's accessable via his LinkedIn profile and his blog at http://techpedsdoc.wordpress.com

Submit a guest post and be heard

Thursday
Sep292011

How to Navigate Market Volatility

Here's a great interview with John Bogle, founder of Vanguard, on how you should navigate any market volatility. Get through the commercial and watch this video. It's definitely worth your while and will only take less than 4 minutes:

There are some great take home points that Bogle makes. I've added some of my thoughts on this as well:

1. You can think of the daily swings in the market as pure speculation. Speculators are trading with other speculators daily and causing wild swings in the market. In the long run, however, markets reflect the growth of economies around the world. If you're a long term investor, you participate in this long term growth.

2. I love it when he says that one day the markets act as if it's the apocalypse and the next day it's nirvana. Just scan the media headlines everyday. It seems like one day the markets plummet because they anticipate another recession and the very next day the markets soar because they anticipate higher economic growth. The point is, you just can't predict any of this.

3. Another timeless Bogle quote is to "Don't do something. Just stand there." Psychologically you're tempted to do something in investing--usually this means selling when the stock market goes down. But it's incredibly difficult to know when to get back in. And usually "doing something" causes more harm than good.

4. If you are going to do something, then rebalance your portfolio within reason. This means to buy stocks at lower prices. So if your target allocation is 70% stocks and 30% bonds, perhaps now you're at 65/35. That means you should rebalance back to 70/30 either with new cash flows or selling some bonds and buying stocks.

5. Is this a "new normal" in investing? I'll write more about this in future posts, but according to Bogle, the boring buy and hold strategy of investing still works if your time frame is long enough. Remember that the timeframe for your portfolio is your entire investing lifetime not just until the day you retire.

6. Finally a great point made here is that you have better things to do with your life than to look at the daily speculative swings in the market. Don't let it distract you from the truly important things in your life--your family, your health, and your career. A well structured portfolio--like the ones I create for my clients--frees up your time to focus on the truly important things in your life.



Wednesday
Sep282011

Pro Golfer Zach Johnson Mentions Medical Fusion 

It's not every day that a Masters Champion mentions your medical conference.

On September 27th, PGA golfer and 2007 Masters Champion Zach Johnson tweeted the following to his 55,000 Twitter followers:

All you physicians, docs, and health experts, check out this website! www.MedFusionConf.org great info, good people, and lots of big words!

All of us with the Medical Fusion Conference appreciate Zach's kind words and the plug for our event.

Momentum for the conference is building so if you haven't already registered, be sure to get your name in for this life-changing event.

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