Emily grew up in Winchester, Massachusetts, where she developed a passion for activism at a young age. As a high schooler in the 2000s, she was an active member of her school’s gay-straight alliance, running educational programs for other students and fighting to keep same-sex marriage legal in Massachusetts. She completed her undergraduate education at Harvard University, studying biology and chemistry, doing research on the chemical origins of life, and leading several progressive Jewish campus organizations. As a senior, she co-founded Open Hillel/Judaism on our own Terms, an organization devoted to building progressive, inclusive, democratically-run Jewish student organizations on college campuses across the United States.
After college, she joined Avodah: The Jewish Service Corps, during which time she developed a love of communal living and collective decision-making. She worked as a paralegal at the New York Legal Assistance Group, fighting for the rights of people with disabilities and caregivers to access Medicare and Medicaid benefits and live independently in their homes. She then returned to Harvard to complete her MD/PhD in social epidemiology, where she studied the ways in which social structures and policies shape population health and can create or reduce health inequities. During this time, she developed a love of primary care and family medicine, particularly providing accessible full-spectrum care, understanding patients as full human beings, and building long-term relationships with patients, families, and communities.
Emily is thrilled to be continuing her training in family medicine at Cambridge Health Alliance. She is passionate about providing humane, relationship-based, empowering health care across the entire lifespan, particularly reproductive health care and end-of-life care. She seeks to use her research skills in social epidemiology to serve the needs of the community, particularly to fight health inequities. Outside of work, she lives with her wife, housemates, and two cats in a communal home in Jamaica Plain, and loves to play guitar, walk outside, and drink tea.
Pronouns: She/Her/Hers