Our Daily Read
by Jenna SchnuerThe modern health-care system is, to put it mildly, complicated. So
Luis Estevez, MD, the chair of the National Hispanic Medical
Association Board of Directors and head of his own health-care
consulting firm, Estevez and Associates, has to stay on top of
advances and policy changes in medical research, economic and
political development, health-care legislation, drug information,
and, well, plenty more. It all adds up to 40 or 50 hours of reading
per week.
Every night, Estevez takes home a folder full of reading material,
with "the most important things on top." He then uses his 45-minute
commute via train to start his evening's reading with longer
articles and memos, using a strategy of reading "the hardest things
first, when I have the best clarity of mind." Once the tougher
stuff is behind him, he combats the dread of not getting enough
done by reading a slew of shorter pieces: "I have a sense of
accomplishment if I get through 10 of 12," he says.
Though medical school prepared him for a lifetime of extensive
reading, one of Estevez's most important tools is his willingness
to put things aside. To keep himself from getting off track - and
from creating an impossible reading list for himself - he has
established a set group of reading resources, and he rarely
deviates from them. "There will always be much more available than
you have time for," he says.
The Constant Reader
For W. Sherman Rogers, a full-time law professor at Howard
University and a legal consultant, reading isn't just a part of his
day. It's one of the main drivers. His key strategy for getting all
his necessary reading done is this: "I don't carve out time to
read. I read all the time," says Rogers. "Virtually everything I
read is connected to something I do or teach."
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