About Dr. Mark Su

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Mark Su is a family medicine physician in the north shore of Massachusetts.  He completed his undergraduate studies at Cornell University, where he met his wife Jessica, who is currently an associate research professor at Harvard Medical School as a statistical geneticist.  He then returned to his home state of Indiana to attend the Indiana University School of Medicine, and subsequently completed his residency training at Tufts University in Boston, Massachusetts, where he was co-chief resident during his final year.  Mark was privileged to be a recipient of the national Bristol Myers Squibb Award for Outstanding Graduate Medical Education, offered only to ten top performing residents from among tens of thousands of candidates each year.  In addition to clinical practice, he and his wife are proud to be on the Scientific Advisory Board for a business company encompassing the use of functional  and integrative medicine resources and soon to go undergo exponential growth.

 

Mark enjoys his family, basketball, nautilus training, photography, and the challenge of entrepreneurship outside of the traditional medical healthcare system.   His family attends Bethany Church in Greenland, NH, where he and his wife have continued to volunteer in the children’s ministry and Mark has played keyboards with one of the bands in the past.  His dreams in life include creating a philanthropic community fund for those suffering from life misfortunes, various international travels with his family, and serving others in the name of Love and Yahweh.

 

He is learning to be proactively positive minded, to do away with the fear of failure, and to dream bigger.  For now, he continues to enjoy advocating for patients and those who are in need of a voice in the midst of our dysfunctional, yet still generally effective, healthcare system.  His professional mission centers around continually educating himself on different approaches to healthcare and how each modality can benefit his patients in different circumstances or with different patient-centered preferences.