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This is a book that you can read in one sitting. This also is a book that you will not soon forget. One part history lesson and one part storytelling, it combines humor and personal experiences to reveal how even the best of leaders and managers can flub up-or excel! Don't you make the same mistakes! Although intended for physicians new to leadership roles in this age of team-oriented healthcare management, anyone can benefit from its examples. Presented in no specific order, and often raging far away from strict medical subjects, the reader can take his or her time to absorb the presented…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This is a book that you can read in one sitting. This also is a book that you will not soon forget. One part history lesson and one part storytelling, it combines humor and personal experiences to reveal how even the best of leaders and managers can flub up-or excel! Don't you make the same mistakes! Although intended for physicians new to leadership roles in this age of team-oriented healthcare management, anyone can benefit from its examples. Presented in no specific order, and often raging far away from strict medical subjects, the reader can take his or her time to absorb the presented subject matters, be it military or administrative in nature. Additionally, there are a few stories about being a husband and father. Just don't forget to have fun reading them.
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Autorenporträt
Dr. Maestro is a board certified family physician, currently practicing in a federally supported community rural health center in upper Michigan. He has had over twenty-six years of direct patient care experience and also fourteen years' experience with administrative medicine, working for a number of healthcare insurers. He graduated from Fairleigh Dickinson University with a B.S. Degree in Biology and attended the Newark Medical School at the University of Medicine and Dentistry in New Jersey, where he was the chief editor of his graduating class' yearbook. He received his MBA in Healthcare Management from the University of Phoenix. He has taught several courses for the University of Phoenix's Colleges of Nursing and Medical Management in Michigan. He has been an honorary clinical assistant professor of medicine. His fascination with EHRs extends back to 1989 when he computerized his own medical office.