Kenny Wang will begin his residency in emergency medicine this fall, but the Tulane University School of Medicine graduate has career aspirations that go far beyond the ER. Wang hopes to eventually go into academic medicine and one day direct a residency program.
To help achieve that goal, Wang enrolled in the five-year MD/MBA program, a joint offering of the School of Medicine and the A. B. Freeman School of Business that enables medical students to earn a Master of Business Administration with just one additional year of study.
“Having a good business background is important for so many reasons,” says Wang (MD/MBA ’15). “A lot of doctors use business degrees to go into private practice, but I think everyone can benefit from skills like negotiations, leadership and financial management.”
Wang is one of a growing number of students combining medical studies with business in an effort to broaden their skills and fast-track their careers. Since 2003, the number of joint MD/MBA programs in America has grown from 39 to 65. More than 500 students across the country now graduate with dual MD/MBA degrees each year.
“Combining business education with medical education gives students the best of both worlds — the ability to care for patients and the ability to practice in a cost effective manner,” says Dr. Marc Kahn, Peterman-Prosser Professor of Medicine and senior associate dean at the School of Medicine, who helped launch the MD/MBA 12 years ago.
“The growth of MD/MBA programs is partly driven by the complexity and rapid changes we are seeing in the health care industry,” adds John Clarke, associate dean for graduate programs at the Freeman School. “But a business background is valuable in a variety of situations, whether you’re looking to run your practice more efficiently, implement best practices, take on a senior management role, or move out of clinical medicine into consulting, venture capital or private equity.”
Dr. Stephen Newman (MBA ’92) practiced medicine for 15 years before getting his MBA, but he says the decision to pursue a business degree was one of the smartest he ever made.
“The MBA program gave me the foundation I needed to advance my career,” says Newman, who went on to become chief operating officer of Tenet Healthcare Corp., the nation’s third-largest hospital company. “It gave me an in-depth understanding of the business of health care.”
This summer, the Freeman School and the School of Medicine introduced a new four-year, accelerated MD/MBA program to make it even easier for medical students to earn a business degree. The intensive format enables students to earn a medical degree and an MBA concurrently, eliminating the need for an additional year of study.
The accelerated MD/MBA is just one component of the Freeman School’s efforts to serve the city’s rapidly expanding healthcare market, which is expected to add 17,000 jobs over the next 20 years. Other initiatives include electives in healthcare management, the expansion of a Professional MBA scholarship program for School of Medicine anesthesiology residents, and a new healthcare specialization within the PMBA program.
“This is all part of a broader strategy to develop a significant healthcare market presence,” says Freeman School Dean Ira Solomon. “Given what we’re seeing in health care at both the local and national levels, we think it’s a strategy we’re going to be pursuing for many years to come.”
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