Background:
After completing his residency at Johns Hopkins, Robbins opened a clinic
in the inner harbor area of Baltimore. He worked as a general practitioner
for 20 years before the chronic budget shortfalls and the practices of
the newly powerful HMOs forced him to close the clinic’s doors.
Strictly out of academic curiosity, he became an assistant coroner for
the Arlington, VA, police department, where he worked his way up to coroner
in two years. After putting in four years in Arlington, he transferred
to Las Vegas. He has been the chief medical examiner in Las Vegas for
the past five years.
Bio:
Born to a single mother in an era when everyone came from a two-parent
household, Robbins spent his life as an underdog. Spurned by his peers,
he took solace in books from an early age, discovering an aptitude for
academia. His mother worked as a nurse, so Robbins spent most nights in
the local hospital. The doctors and nurses unofficially adopted him, and
they not only gave him free rein of the premises, they allowed him to
assist in any number of activities the chronically short-handed facility
required. From stocking shelves as a ten-year-old, to assisting in simple
surgeries as a teenager, Robbins knew more about the hospital than some
of the doctors who worked there. And he put that knowledge to work when
he opened his own clinic. Many years of fighting the good fight eventually
left him drained, and after shifting into what felt like a natural career
change for him (medicine is all about life and death), he and his wife
and their three children packed up and moved to Las Vegas. He’s
free to pursue his own interests, both at work and at home, and that’s
the way he likes it right now. His medical career has somewhat followed
the path he envisioned for himself, but his personal life has far exceeded
his wildest expectations. His wife and his children have replaced books
as the center of his life and nothing will ever change that.
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