Program Director
Instructor in Medicine, Harvard Medical School
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Dr. Rebecca Rogers began her physician journey as a medical student at Harvard Medical School, the first physician in her family and not knowing what kind of doctor she wanted to be. After witnessing firsthand the intimate and longitudinal relationships that are forged between patients and their PCPs, the range and depth of clinical knowledge required of the general internist, and the excitement and uncertainty that a seemly average day at the clinic can bring, it became clear that becoming a primary care physician was the path for her.
After finishing medical school she did research at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, studying how primary care systems can deliver public health services. It was an eye-opening experience to learn about the UK’s National Health Service, to see how medicine operates in a world where access to affordable health is guaranteed to everyone. Dr. Rogers returned from London to do her residency here at CHA, where she was awed by the commitment of her faculty and co-residents to CHA’s mission to provide high quality care to the most marginalized populations. She became interested in resident continuity clinic as an educational entity, and during residency she led a pilot project of resident-to-resident hand-offs between ambulatory blocks. During her chief resident year at CHA, Dr. Rogers took part in the Harvard Macy Program for Post-Graduate Trainees. Through that course she developed a curriculum to help interns learn the skills required to be effective, efficient and resilient primary care doctors, which she continues to teach and mentors others in similar teaching.
Dr. Rogers took her first job out of residency as a primary care doctor at CHA, where her daily interactions with patients continued to inspire her to become a better clinician and to advocate for health and social systems that truly care for those that need it most. She joined the program leadership as an Assistant Program director for ambulatory education in 2017 and then as Program Director in fall 2023. During this time she has published and presented work (often partnering with residents) on a community-based orientation activity, improvements in screening for food insecurity, mental health skills for general internists, as well as several ambulatory-based educational innovations. She is thrilled to be inspiring the next generation of curious, compassionate, and mission-driven internal medicine physicians and health advocates.
On the homefront she is wife to a high school teacher in-training, mom to two school-aged boys (human) and two geriatric boys (feline), a bike commuter, tofu lover, and backyard birder.