Dr. Jennifer Bracey
Educator and clinician Dr. Jennifer Bracey has a solid reputation. A large part of her motivation is working behind the scenes on health policies that might lead to a more equitable and better care system for all people, even though she has teaching and front-line healthcare experience.
She started her post-secondary studies with a degree in Biology from the College of Charleston. After that, she was admitted to the Medical University of South Carolina, earning a Doctor of Medicine degree in 2006, and was inducted into the renowned Alpha Omega Alpha medical honor organization.
Emory University School of Medicine's J. Willis Hurst Internal Medicine Residency Program accepted Jennifer Bracey in 2006. As a result of its relationship with Grady Memorial Hospital, Bracey chose this Emory University program. A nationally recognized safety-net hospital, Grady provides high-quality treatment to individuals who would otherwise be denied it, particularly the low-income and uninsured residents of Atlanta's broader metropolitan region.
Grady was the first hospital in the area to be certified as a Level 1 trauma center. As a result of her residency match at Emory University, Dr. Bracey decided to focus on patient care and policy reform to help the many Georgians who lack access to high-quality medical care.
After completing her residency, she relocated to Baltimore to strike a better work-life balance. The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine offered Dr. Jennifer Bracey a distinguished full-time post as an Instructor of Medicine. Three years after graduating from Johns Hopkins University, Dr. Bracey applied for and was admitted to a teaching post at Emory University School of Medicine, where she felt most alive.
In 2012, Dr. Jennifer became an Assistant Professor of Medicine at Emory University School of Medicine, where she would spend five of the most satisfying years of her career. She worked as a doctor at Grady's International Clinic, honing her international healthcare expertise. Dr. Jennifer Bracey's work at Emory University took her throughout the globe. As part of Project Medishare, she took students to Haiti for three years. Founded by a Haitian non-profit, Project Medishare serves some of the world's poorest patients in the country's rural and remote places. Dr. Bracey also put in two years after that. In this position, she assisted residents and staff at Ethiopia's capital, Black Lion Hospital.
Since Emory University School of Medicine was a great experience for Dr. Jennifer's professional career, she returned home in the summer of 2017. She took a job at the Medical University of South Carolina as an Assistant Professor of Medicine. A "Master Clinical Skills Teacher" at MUSC, Bracey guided second-year medical students through physical examinations, differential diagnoses, and clinical reasoning tasks to improve their abilities in these areas. She also taught first-year medical students in the Fundamentals of Patient Care course.
She started her post-secondary studies with a degree in Biology from the College of Charleston. After that, she was admitted to the Medical University of South Carolina, earning a Doctor of Medicine degree in 2006, and was inducted into the renowned Alpha Omega Alpha medical honor organization.
Emory University School of Medicine's J. Willis Hurst Internal Medicine Residency Program accepted Jennifer Bracey in 2006. As a result of its relationship with Grady Memorial Hospital, Bracey chose this Emory University program. A nationally recognized safety-net hospital, Grady provides high-quality treatment to individuals who would otherwise be denied it, particularly the low-income and uninsured residents of Atlanta's broader metropolitan region.
Grady was the first hospital in the area to be certified as a Level 1 trauma center. As a result of her residency match at Emory University, Dr. Bracey decided to focus on patient care and policy reform to help the many Georgians who lack access to high-quality medical care.
After completing her residency, she relocated to Baltimore to strike a better work-life balance. The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine offered Dr. Jennifer Bracey a distinguished full-time post as an Instructor of Medicine. Three years after graduating from Johns Hopkins University, Dr. Bracey applied for and was admitted to a teaching post at Emory University School of Medicine, where she felt most alive.
In 2012, Dr. Jennifer became an Assistant Professor of Medicine at Emory University School of Medicine, where she would spend five of the most satisfying years of her career. She worked as a doctor at Grady's International Clinic, honing her international healthcare expertise. Dr. Jennifer Bracey's work at Emory University took her throughout the globe. As part of Project Medishare, she took students to Haiti for three years. Founded by a Haitian non-profit, Project Medishare serves some of the world's poorest patients in the country's rural and remote places. Dr. Bracey also put in two years after that. In this position, she assisted residents and staff at Ethiopia's capital, Black Lion Hospital.
Since Emory University School of Medicine was a great experience for Dr. Jennifer's professional career, she returned home in the summer of 2017. She took a job at the Medical University of South Carolina as an Assistant Professor of Medicine. A "Master Clinical Skills Teacher" at MUSC, Bracey guided second-year medical students through physical examinations, differential diagnoses, and clinical reasoning tasks to improve their abilities in these areas. She also taught first-year medical students in the Fundamentals of Patient Care course.
Dr. Jennifer Bracey © 2022. All rights reserved.