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Natalie Mo

695

Bold Points

1x

Finalist

1x

Winner

Education

Fordham University

Doctoral degree program (PhD, MD, JD, etc.)
2022 - 2025
  • Majors:
    • Law

Jefferson (Philadelphia University + Thomas Jefferson University)

Doctoral degree program (PhD, MD, JD, etc.)
2002 - 2006
  • Majors:
    • Medicine

Jefferson (Philadelphia University + Thomas Jefferson University)

Doctoral degree program (PhD, MD, JD, etc.)
2001 - 2006
  • Majors:
    • Medicine

Sarah Lawrence College

Bachelor's degree program
1993 - 1997
  • Majors:
    • Religion/Religious Studies
    • Medicine

Miscellaneous

  • Desired degree level:

    Doctoral degree program (PhD, MD, JD, etc.)

  • Graduate schools of interest:

  • Transfer schools of interest:

  • Majors of interest:

    • Law
  • Not planning to go to medical school
  • Career

    • Dream career field:

      Law Practice

    • Dream career goals:

      Lawyer

      Sports

      Tennis

      Varsity
      1985 – 199712 years

      Awards

      • mvp

      Research

      • Medicine

        UCSF — Researcher
        2005 – 2006

      Arts

      • Multiple

        Music
        amahl and the night visitors
        1982 – Present

      Future Interests

      Advocacy

      Politics

      Volunteering

      Philanthropy

      Entrepreneurship

      Dr. Jade Education Scholarship
      In my dream life, I lead Health Justice Initiative (HJI), a thriving medical-legal nonprofit, transforming healthcare access in Brooklyn's underserved communities. This vision was born on April 15, 2020, at 6:00 A.M., during my first shift volunteering in Mount Sinai Hospital's COVID-19 wards. I remember stepping onto the medical floor, hearing labored breathing and the staccato bark of dry coughing. As I made my rounds, I became acutely aware that most faces looking out at me from behind respirator masks were those of Black or Brown people. That morning catalyzed my dream to actively confront systemic racial inequities in healthcare. After twenty years as a practicing physician, I made the decision to pursue a law degree, combining these two disciplines to bridge the gap between healthcare and legal advocacy. My dream life takes on heightened urgency amid today's growing disillusionment with healthcare systems and insurance companies that prioritize profits over patients. Each morning in my dream life, I work alongside dedicated attorneys and community partners in Brownsville, East New York, and East Flatbush, where up to 34% of residents live in poverty. HJI serves individuals who are systematically shut out of our healthcare system, the undocumented and the 250,000 New Yorkers in the coverage gap, earning too much for Medicaid but too little for private insurance. My client list inspires me daily: the undocumented mother finally accessing prenatal care, the working father no longer having to choose between medication and rent. On weekends, I teach the next generation of medical-legal advocates at community health fairs, sharing how my journey from physician to lawyer to community advocate contributes to a new model for health justice. In this dream, HJI expands from our Brooklyn foundation to communities city-wide. I envision building a network of community health centers staffed with legal advocates, ensuring every New Yorker has an ally in their healthcare journey. This dream represents more than professional ambition, it is an urgent response to our current political climate, where healthcare access grows increasingly precarious for vulnerable communities and basic care remains tragically out of reach for millions of Americans. Even as corporate interests threaten to further restrict access to care, I remain committed to creating spaces where our communities can thrive through equitable healthcare access. This scholarship would help manifest that dream, supporting my legal education while I maintain my medical practice and build HJI into a beacon of hope for healthcare equity.
      Robert Lee, Sr. and Bernice Williams Memorial Scholarship
      I remember stepping onto the medical floor that day and hearing labored breathing and the staccato bark of dry coughing. It was 6:00 A.M. on April 15, 2020 and I had just started my first shift volunteering in the COVID-19 wards at Mount Sinai Hospital. As I started making my rounds, I became acutely aware of something disturbing: of the patients under my care, most of the faces that looked out at me from behind respirator masks were those of black or brown people. This was the start of my re-kindled interest in pursuing a degree in law. While COVID-19 has undoubtedly shed new light on the realities of medical racism, this was not the first time that I witnessed inequities in health care. When I was a medical student, I noticed how medical studies often excluded Black, Indigenous, and People of Color individuals. As such, I made it a mission to develop scholarship that addresses issues of discrimination in the healthcare system. For example, my book chapter, “Ethnic Differences in Skin Properties: The Objective Data”, in The Handbook of Cosmetic Science and Technology, was a path-breaking study that engaged the ways that different skin types respond to various medical treatments. Since so many medications are designed with only white people in mind, my medical research was once again tied to questions of inclusivity and social justice. Experiences such as these have shaped my career as a physician for over the last 15 years. In my New York City-based private practice, I specialize in treating skin of color, and I am committed to providing care irrespective of my patients’ insurance status or their financial circumstances. I have built my practice to be one which engages people of diverse backgrounds, as well as those who have been historically affected by racism and income inequality. My achievements were recently recognized in the New York Times article, “Dermatology Has a Problem with Skin of Color”, in which I am featured as a dermatologist who addresses the lack of racial inclusivity in the medical education curriculum that is taught to future physicians. I am also in the process of creating an online database that highlights physicians of color so that patients can more readily and easily connect with doctors who are attuned to their specific health care needs. While I am proud of the ways my practice has allowed me to engage problems of inequity on an individual-patient basis, I am now at a place in my career where I want to address these issues on a more systemic scale. Because of the structural dimension of medical inequity, a Juris Doctor degree in law would enable me to take an intersectional approach to addressing the legal aspects of the healthcare system in the United States to better advocate for those who lack a voice. Thus, I am particularly interested in focusing on public health and civil rights law, with an eye toward developing a non-profit, medical-legal, community-driven initiative that will advocate for Black, Indigenous, and People of Color, as well as undocumented and uninsured immigrant populations, in receiving the physical and mental health care that they deserve.
      NY Law Scholarship
      Winner
      I remember stepping onto the medical floor that day and hearing labored breathing and the staccato bark of dry coughing. It was 6:00 A.M. on April 15, 2020 and I had just started my first shift volunteering in the COVID-19 wards at Mount Sinai Hospital. As I started making my rounds, I became acutely aware of something disturbing: of the patients under my care, most of the faces that looked out at me from behind respirator masks were those of black or brown people. This was the start of my re-kindled interest in pursuing a degree in law. While COVID-19 has undoubtedly shed new light on the realities of medical racism, this was not the first time that I witnessed inequities in health care. When I was a medical student, I noticed how medical studies often excluded Black, Indigenous, and People of Color individuals. As such, I made it a mission to develop scholarship that addresses issues of discrimination in the healthcare system. For example, my book chapter, “Ethnic Differences in Skin Properties: The Objective Data”, in The Handbook of Cosmetic Science and Technology, was a path-breaking study that engaged the ways that different skin types respond to various medical treatments. Since so many medications are designed with only white people in mind, my medical research was once again tied to questions of inclusivity and social justice. Experiences such as these have shaped my career as a physician for over the last 15 years. In my New York City-based private practice, I specialize in treating skin of color, and I am committed to providing care irrespective of my patients’ insurance status or their financial circumstances. I have built my practice to be one which engages people of diverse backgrounds, as well as those who have been historically affected by racism and income inequality. My achievements were recently recognized in the New York Times article, “Dermatology Has a Problem with Skin of Color”, in which I am featured as a dermatologist who addresses the lack of racial inclusivity in the medical education curriculum that is taught to future physicians. I am also in the process of creating an online database that highlights physicians of color so that patients can more readily and easily connect with doctors who are attuned to their specific health care needs. While I am proud of the ways my practice has allowed me to engage problems of inequity on an individual-patient basis, I am now at a place in my career where I want to address these issues on a more systemic scale. Because of the structural dimension of medical inequity, a Juris Doctor degree in law would enable me to take an intersectional approach to addressing the legal aspects of the healthcare system in the United States to better advocate for those who lack a voice. Thus, I am particularly interested in focusing on public health and civil rights law, with an eye toward developing a non-profit, medical-legal, community-driven initiative that will advocate for Black, Indigenous, and People of Color, as well as undocumented and uninsured immigrant populations, in receiving the physical and mental health care that they deserve.