📄 Extracted Text (1,236 words)
From:
To: jeffrey E. <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Gotham Questions
Date: Wed, 18 Feb 2015 21:07:02 +0000
Yes I did... Is it retarded..?
Sent from my iPhone
On Feb 18, 2015, at 3:37 PM, jeffrey E. <[email protected]> wrote:
you didn't wrtie this?
On Wed, Feb 18, 2015 at 1:07 PM, wrote:
Any thoughts?
Let's do it over the phone . I will call you
Sent from my iPhone
Begin forwarded message:
From: Kimberly Feierstein <
Date: Febru 18, 2015 at 1:01:25 PM EST
To:
Subject: Gotham Questions
1. As it relates to your career and your own aspirations what does `power' mean to you?
ANSWER: Personally, power means the ability to help a lot of people go through a difficult
situation with a network of services personalized to ever patient. The experience should be
as pleasant as possible. When I see the Dubin Breast Center filled with women from all
socio-economic classes getting the best possible care and being able to cope with the
difficult diagnosis of breast cancer in the best possible way...it feels powerful.
2. Power or influence? Do they mean different things for you? If so, why?
ANSWER: I think power and influence have a lot in common. As it relates to healthcare,
the influence you can have in shaping the future of care comes with the power of treating a
lot of patients. At the Dubin Breast Center we are trying to influence healthcare where the
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whole person is being cared for in every possible need (psychological, dietary, genetics,
cosmetic and integrative medicine) combined with the traditional treatment of breast cancer.
3. Is it tougher now to climb the career ladder in your field than it was when you started
out? If so, why? Is it tougher to do so in New York?
ANSWER: I think medicine is a wonderful field for women. It's difficult for me to
comment on if it's tougher now or then. Personally, I don't feel like I am climbing a career
ladder. What I do comes from my passion for helping people. This passion stems from my
somewhat unique combination of being a philanthropist, a patient and a physician. I assume
it is harder to be in New York as the competition is bigger since the city attracts the brightest
and the best.
4. What is the greatest advantage for being in NYC for the type of work you do? Greatest
challenge? How have you dealt with them over time?
ANSWER: The greatest advantage of New York City is that you get exposed to brilliant
people that are conducting groundbreaking research. Another advantage of course is that it
is easy for a patient to have access. We are not usually asking patients to drive for hours to
get to us. The greatest challenge for us is to be able to provide excellent care for every
patient while reimbursement in healthcare is getting more and more challenging. Doctors
are forced to take care of more people over a shorter period of time in order to have any type
of profit. The way we have dealt with that over time is to rely on philanthropy.
Philanthropy is the key to what we do at the Dubin Breast Center.
5. Describe your toughest career challenge and how you dealt with it.
ANSWER: I would say my toughest challenge was when I was raising three kids and at the
same time working. I never wanted to give up my presence in the medical field, but it was
difficult when the kids were small. The way I dealt with it was by having great help and a
flexible schedule. I have had the same nanny for twenty years and I don't think I could have
done it without her and my supportive husband.
6. Greatest success/achievement to date —and why?
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ANSWER: What I consider my greatest success and achievement is when Glenn and I
established the Dubin Breast Center, a multidisciplinary center for women with risk of
breast cancer and women who are currently being worked up for breast cancer. It was a
vison and a dream that was very rewarding to see come to fruition. Today it is thriving with
more than 80,000 patient visits since we opened four years ago.
7. It has been said that power or influence today is all about engagement. In order to achieve
meaningful impact, leaders must connect with a diverse array of stakeholders to build
community, and form unconventional partnerships before ideas can turn into action. Do you
agree? And if so, how are you are navigating these new power/influence rules?
ANSWER: I absolutely agree. My engagement at the Dubin Breast Center is present every
day. I even sometimes spend weekends at the center, even though it's closed. I am engaged
in everything from recruiting to program building, facility questions, philanthropy and the
patient experience. I can often be seen vacuuming or cleaning the floors, serving fruit to the
patients and walking someone down to radiology for a biopsy. There is nothing I will not do
to help out at the center. I think that has an impact on everyone else who works and spends
their time at the center.
9. What's the biggest challenge in your field for the next five years? How does being in New
York help or hurt that?
ANSWER: Our biggest challenge in the future is to continue our philanthropy and continue
to grow. New York City has several large hospitals and the market share is pretty
established. I believe by giving the best possible care, we will continue to get patients. The
challenge is going to be very difficult reimbursement issues. Our goal is to always accept
women from all socio-economic backgrounds. Also, research will see a more and more
challenging and competitive market in grant giving.
10. Is it harder for women to achieve a work-life balance in New York?
ANSWER: No, I actually think it is easier to achieve a work-life balance in New York City.
I think it is easier to get help in New York City than in the suburbs. I also happen to love to
walk or use my kick scooter wherever I go, which means I get exercise throughout the day
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without having to go to the gym. Multitasking has become important in my life and I
believe it is easier to do in the city than if I lived somewhere else.
11. How would you assess the future for NYC women in your industry?
ANSWER: The future for women in medicine is great. Women are natural caretakers and I
encourage every woman to go into medicine. It's been immensely rewarding to me.
12. What's your best advice for success, particularly as it pertains to working in NYC.
ANSWER: Be focused, be patient, stay true to what you believe your mission is. Be
competitive, but with grace. Treat everyone with respect.
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