Takeaway
“Grateful that my patients are ok with me saying, ‘I don’t know, but I’ll find out,’ and for all my colleagues who are happy to teach me the answer.”-Dr. David Hurwitz, Johns Hopkins Medicine
Lifelong Learning in Clinical Excellence | November 18, 2022 | <1 min read
Highlights
Grateful that my patients are ok with me saying, “I don’t know, but I’ll find out,” and for all my colleagues who are happy to teach me the answer.
Dr. David Hurwitz, Johns Hopkins Medicine
Parenting: challenging indeed. Terrifying. Awe-inspiring. Humbling.
Dr. Eric Last, Northwell Health
The challenge of advocating for patients who are often unseen by the healthcare system.
Dr. Mariah Robertson, Johns Hopkins Medicine
To both love and hate systems of care I work in. There’s so much good we can do, and so many challenges to doing it. So, this gives a lifelong set of issues to work to improve on, and that same system gave me really good skills with which to do that work.
Dr. Colleen Christmas, Johns Hopkins Medicine
To witness suffering and to be allowed the opportunity to sit with it when I cannot fix it.
Dr. Ambereen Mehta, Johns Hopkins Medicine
For people who challenge my perspectives as it clarifies my thinking.
Dr. Margaret Chisolm, Johns Hopkins Medicine
To be able to continue to work alongside an amazing team that remains committed to supporting our patients and learners during these challenging times.
Dr. Scott Wright, Johns Hopkins Medicine
The privilege of teaching and mentoring medical students.
Dr. Jeff Millstein, Penn Medicine
Joining the Johns Hopkins Bayview GIM Division. It’s been challenging to enter a new career path in medical education, but so rewarding.