Blog Archives

NYU Medical School – Free

Many of you read the recent news that NYU Medical School will charge nothing for tuition going forward. Here’s a great entry from the CrispyDoc blog that sums up the fact that this announcement is going to completely change medical education going forward  – and why.

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Match Day and Financial Security

First, congratulations to all of my residency applicant advisees: I am thrilled by the enormous success the Match brought to these candidates in a variety of fields. If you have not yet updated me, please send me an email.

Second, now that residency applicants have a professional plan for their next few years, they also need a financial plan. You could choose to work many fewer years, work in an environment you prefer, or go to part-time if you start to make good financial decisions right now.

CrispyDoc.com is a financial literacy blog for the newly minted physician. (Yes, you.) Here’s a recent blog entry about how to simply start to manage your financial portfolio without a financial advisor (even if that portfolio is tiny or you have significant debt). You can use Dr. CrispyDoc’s advice and call up Vanguard or Fidelity (I get no kickback from them) and tell them you need help setting up what you have read. Whala! You are already making good decisions that will earn you compound interest and give you more control as you move through your career.

Here are more posts from Crispy Doc on finances, early retirement for doctors, raising a family, career choice, hedge funds, Costco and more.

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Some People Have Real Problems

The residency and medical school application processes are anxiety-provoking, but in honor of Thanksgiving, I’m posting this guest blog from CrispyDoc David Presser about a truly stressful, heartbreaking choice a patient recently had to make…

Years ago, I bought an album because the title caught my eye: Some People Have Real Problems. I was browsing used CDs in a music store back when both of those existed, and I felt the universe trying to restore perspective to my personal pity party.

Fast forward a decade, and I had fallen off the wagon again into whining doctor mode: headed into my second weekend night shift in as many days. The first night had been a killer, where the spigot of patients opened to a steady gush around 1 A.M. and all four of the late shift docs stayed several hours past the end of their shift to flush the proverbial toilet that our waiting room had become.
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About Dr. Michelle Finkel

Dr. Michelle Finkel

Dr. Finkel is a graduate of Stanford University and Harvard Medical School. On completing her residency at Harvard, she was asked to
stay on as faculty at Harvard Medical School and spent five years teaching at the world-renowned Massachusetts General Hospital.
She was appointed to the Assistant Residency Director position for the Harvard Affiliated
Emergency Medicine Residency where she reviewed countless applications, personal statements and resumes. Read more

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Listen to Dr. Finkel’s interview on the White Coat Investor podcast:

Listen to Dr. Finkel’s interview on the FeminEm podcast: