Free Medical Advice For Family: No Good Deed Goes Unpunished

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I come from a driven immigrant family. During a recent podcast interview with the ever-gracious Dr. Nii Darko, we discussed the pressures we felt with being the first generation raised in our families’ adopted country, and the responsibility we inherited to realize our parents’ dreams of success. Our professional careers, for better or worse, commonly become the validation our parents …

My Life Partner

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The following post comes courtesy of Vagabond MD, a radiologist who cut back who is a friend and much revered guest-poster on this blog and many others. In it he addresses the (possibly vanishing) culture of his single-hospital democratic group (SDG), a physician-owned partnership that was historically the basic unit of medical practice. It has recently been replaced en masse …

Docs Who Cut Back #21: Doc G

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Doc G in an internist best known for his prodigious writing via his blog, DiverseFI, as well as being one half of the dynamic duo behind the What’s Up Next? podcast. We met at Fin Con 18, and I was not the only person struck by his gift with words. The details of how Doc G build his home-based concierge …

Golden Rules For Living In The Golden State

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I describe myself as an unrepentant Californian. I grew up hiking along coastal foothills and spent my youth learning respect for the Pacific Ocean. I’m at my  happiest sporting shorts and sandals. When I wanted to impress girls in high school, I’d wear my good flannel (that was really a thing). I love it here. When you live in Eden, …

The Doctor Salary Is A Drug: Potential For Abuse

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My sense of gallows humor, honed over decades of emergency medicine, is bound to infuse my writing. I hope it will not be mistaken for making light of substance abuse or the pain it causes individuals and families. As a common final pathway for many in crisis, the ED at best serves as an inflection point and support for those …

The Doctor Salary Is A Drug: Pharmacokinetics

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I awoke this morning inspired to describe the interesting and unusual pharmacokinetics of a drug I have deep experience both using and abusing: the doctor salary. Absorption Doctor salaries have a delayed onset from the time of initial ingestion. 4 years of university education plus 4 years of medical school plus 3-7 years of residency creates a situation rarely encountered …

Last Week Was My Allotment of Warhol’s 15 Minutes Of Fame

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July started with a bang, and I thought I’d share it with those few of you who read the blog despite not sharing DNA with me. It was a weird “moons lined up with Jupiter” sort of situation where several of my invisible friends through blogging bestowed kindnesses that happened to occur in roughly the same one week period. For …

Ordering Off The Menu

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I Recently Overheard Someone At A Table Near Mine Order Something That Wasn’t On The Menu Docs who cut back demonstrate an aptitude for envisioning possibility where others cannot. They sacrifice income to gain time to pursue balance. They create and sustain unconventional arrangements with employers and colleagues, and find ways to package these arrangements fairly so all affected parties …

Docs Who Cut Back #20: Dr. Academic To Community

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Dr. Academic To Community (ATC) is an emergency physician who was on an express track to an academic career when she and her husband started a family. Her goals evolved and she recalibrated her life accordingly. My fascinating interview with Dr. ATC proceeded in a non-linear fashion. A central theme was the struggle to balance career aspirations and intellectual passion …

Wha’ Happened in Oaxaca? Part 2

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Guelaguetza By sheer dumb luck, our trip coincided with the annual Guelaguetza celebration. It began in pre-colonial times as an event where representatives from far-flung villages came together in shared worship of corn and the deities that brought the harvest, and included exchanges of food and textiles as a form of reciprocity between villages. The event brings rural indigenous cultural …