Blog Archives

Three-Year Medical School?

Ezekiel Emmanuel recently wrote a piece in the New York Times with two collaborators arguing the benefits of changing medical school to three years from four. The primary point was financial: Starting next year, under the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act,” federal student loans for those in professional graduate programs will be capped at $50,000 per year. Grad PLUS loans will be eliminated completely, leaving half of medical students in the lurch.

Dr. Emmanuel and his collaborators point out that most medical students now arrive with upper-level academic background in sciences and that fourth-year medical school is almost like a “gap year.” While I hesitate to agree with those two points, I do think he and his colleagues make other reasonable assertions: For example, making medical school harder to pay for will lead to fewer students from rural backgrounds and therefore fewer future physicians who will work in those needy areas.

Take a look at the piece here.

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A Great Opportunity for College Premeds

Applications for the Summer Healthcare Professionals Education Program (SHPEP), a Robert Wood Johnson funded opportunity for college students interested in healthcare professions, open on November 1. SHPEP specifically targets students from economically or educationally disadvantaged backgrounds and those with demonstrated interest in issues affecting underserved populations. The goal is to help college freshmen, sophomores, and juniors apply and matriculate successfully to health professions schools. SHPEP is housed at 10 universities across the country with different start dates – all over the summer. Housing, meals, stipend, and travel expenses are all paid.

Take a look at the program’s FAQ page here. The application deadline is February 5.

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Federal Cuts are Forcing Academic Medicine into an Existential Mess

I was in Boston last week for my 30th Harvard Medical School reunion. I thought it would be fun, but it was even better than I expected.

Unfortunately, the festivities were marred by a black cloud of current and threatened federal cuts to academic medicine. Harvard, in particular, is getting hit hard, but my classmates were recounting the difficulties they are facing at their current, respective institutions – Harvard and others. 

The AAMC has done a good job offering specific examples of the damage in their recent piece “The Impact of Federal Actions on Academic Medicine and the US Health Care System.” Read it and weep. 

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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: