Dr. Jennifer Bracey

Dr. Jennifer Bracey is an Instructor of Medicine at Johns Hopkins University and Emory University School of Medicine. After completing her residency in 2009, she searched for a way to balance her personal and professional life. Baltimore offered the perfect opportunity to do just that. She loves working with students and teaching them how to become great physicians.

Jennifer Bracey started her career in healthcare as an Assistant Professor of Medicine at Emory University School of Medicine in 2012. That year would be the first of five fulfilling years in her career. In 2012 she also served as an attending physician at Grady's International Clinic, sharpening her skills and expertise in international health care.

Dr. Bracey found that her career at Emory University took her worldwide. She brought students to Haiti for three years as part of Project Medishare. Project Medishare is a Haitian non-profit that provides essential healthcare services to some of the world's poorest people in the island nation's more rural and isolated places. Then, Dr. Bracey spent two years aiding residents and staff at the Black Lion Hospital in Addis Ababa, the capital of Ethiopia - Africa's second most populous country and one of its fastest-growing economies.

Dr. Jennifer Bracey is originally from Charleston, South Carolina. Her experience at Emory University School of Medicine was highly fulfilling, but her personal life drew her back to Charleston in the summer of 2017. She accepted a position as Assistant Professor of Medicine at Medical University South Carolina (MUSC). There, she was one of the "Master Clinical Skills Teachers." She instructed second-year medical students in a physical examination and directed them in differential diagnosis and clinical reasoning activities.

Bracey is a highly skilled and experienced nurse dedicated to helping others. She has worked in the medical field for many years, teaching first-year medical students the Fundamentals of Patient Care course. Bracey received several awards from her students at MUSC, including the Michael C. Assey Attending of the Year award and the Leonard Tow Humanism in Medicine award from the Gold Humanism Honor Society. She is grateful for the time she spent with her pupils, which was generously reflected in their exemplary ratings.