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...year to pay its 7,000 Harvard-affiliated doctors. Unlike most medical schools across the country, Harvard does not run its own hospital; instead, HMS maintains relationships with teaching hospitals, which provide doctors-cum-instructors on a good will system. Although “7,000 Harvard-affiliated doctors?? may seem unexpectedly large since HMS has 771 students in its MD program, each doctor is only expected to teach for 50 hours per semester, and those quotas are unmonitored and by all accounts rarely met. This disparity stems from the small and variable pay that doctors can expect...

Author: By The Crimson Staff | Title: Shelling Out For Students | 3/15/2007 | See Source »

...developing the faculty teaching compensation plan, said that increased funding will better compensate physicians who devote time and energy to teaching. “Financial pressures are often so great that physicians cannot easily take time out of their busy schedules treating patients,” Slavin said. Harvard doctors?? current hourly pay for teaching is significantly less than the amount usually offered for a doctor’s services. The plan to increase pay to $100 an hour for teaching would be the pay of a primary care physician. The money will be distributed to individual...

Author: By Anupriya Singhal, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: HMS To Triple Faculty Salary | 3/12/2007 | See Source »

Come April, in addition to her roles as a mentor and researcher, D’Souza will also be a mother. Even though she says she tries to heed doctors?? orders and works as much as possible from home, she admits with a chuckle that she usually has twelve-hour work days...

Author: By Kelly Y. Gu, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: D’Souza Takes New Approach to Fighting AIDS | 12/7/2006 | See Source »

Human kidneys growing in pigs? Doctors?? prescriptions for psychedelic drugs? Anything goes in 2056, according to Harvard professors and alums quoted in a survey released this month by New Scientist, a London-based magazine...

Author: By Shoshana S. Tell, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Profs Peer Into Crystal Balls | 11/22/2006 | See Source »

...potential consequences are fearsome. As The New York Times reported, the Patriot Act, renewed by Congress in March, empowers the FBI to demand individuals’ private information from doctors?? offices, banks, and libraries without a judge’s consent, using “national security letters,” which carry with them a “gag rule,” that prevents recipients from discussing the letters with anyone but their lawyers. (Those investigated can challenge this gag rule.) For researchers using services like RefWorks, the potential hazard is that their academic work could...

Author: By Adam Goldenberg | Title: Read It Again, Uncle Sam | 11/13/2006 | See Source »

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