Medical Economics November 30, 2022
Jordan Rosenfeld

Physicians need to plan their estate to protect their assets, manage their long-term health care, and make matters easier for their next of kin.

Physicians may deal with life and death issues every day, but few may want to think about the eventuality of their own end. And yet, not only do physicians need to think about it, they need to plan their estate to protect their assets, manage their long-term health care, and make matters easier for their next of kin.

Estate planning and elder care attorney Rebecca Goldfarb, J.D., co-owner of Goldfarb & Luu in Tarzana, California, said, “The benefit of an estate plan is to get your wishes honored, to avoid court, and to maintain family harmony.”

...

Today's Sponsors

LEK
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

LEK

 
Topics: Physician, Provider
ACP renews call for physicians to vote, make health care an issue for presidential election year
Why doctors should embrace uncertainty for better patient outcomes
New codes from the AMA could mean more RPM reimbursement by 2025
FTC to vote on banning noncompete clauses
How Health Data Sharing Impacts How Clinicians Care for Patients

Share This Article