Adjusting to another coast
Luis Pena
Robert C. Amster is a 53-year-old Corona del Mar resident and owner
and medical director of Newport Urgent Care.
Where did you grow up?
I grew up back East in New Jersey. Rockaway, a small town near
Morristown, which is about 30 miles west of New York City. It’s a
very small community. I lived there up until basically 1979. We had
the same home all those years. I was in the same neighborhood all my
life until I moved out to California, although, of course, I went to
school and training and all of that, so I was away from home.
What kind of childhood did you have?
I grew up with friends that I’ve basically maintained all my life.
A very close group of eight or 10 of us. And my father worked in New
York City so I was exposed to Manhattan and that area quite a bit. I
have one older sister who moved to New England, and I attended school
basically through medical school back in the East Coast area, either
New Jersey or New York, and then moved out to California in 1979. I
had a lot of good close friends that I went through grade school with
and high school with, and some of [whom] went to the same college I
went to. I was active in sports and music. We played in bands
together. Interestingly, we are having a 40th year, eighth-grade
reunion this summer back in New Jersey.
How did you end up in Newport-Mesa?
Well, I attended school and training in the East, and once I was
finished with my residency, I moved to Los Angeles and met my wife,
one year before I moved out here. My wife is from Northridge. We
initially lived in the West L.A. area, and then she wanted to move to
Orange County, which we did in the mid 1980s, and we’ve been in
Newport Beach, Corona del Mar ever since. Almost 20 years now. First
in Newport Beach for half of that and then Corona del Mar.
What are your greatest accomplishments in life?
Well, No. 1, my 25-year marriage and two great daughters. That’s
my No. 1. [My wife] helped me shape my career and our life at home,
the fact that my wife raised the kids. We decided early on that she
would not work at a job but rather would be home and available for
the kids. And you know, raising a family and being somewhat
successful and keeping the same marriage, I think, is a big
accomplishment. Two is developing a practice that I am in the midst
of doing now in the Newport Beach area after having been in practice
in other areas and other positions. I’ve worked in administrative
capacities as a medical director for health plans. But I think my
second biggest accomplishment is developing this practice here in
Newport. Another thing that I’ve done that I’m proud of is that I
became a professional pilot along the way at the same time that I was
a physician. I was also a commercial pilot. At one point, I had two
careers -- a physician and an airline pilot. I did that for about
two, three-and-a-half years.
If you could re-do one moment or incident in your life, what would
it be?
Probably the birth of kids, because I sort of took it for granted
and now I feel that I should have been more involved in it at the
time. I was physically there, but it was not as momentous to me as it
should have been. At the time, I was working quite a bit and seeing
patients, so you take that for granted, and that’s something that I
regret. It was obviously very meaningful, and I would like to relive
that now if I could.
What profession other than yours would you like to have tried?
I’d like to have had a career as a business executive in a large
service-oriented business. Along the way, I actually got an MBA
degree that’s part of what I’m doing in medicine now. I was and have
been very fascinated with the business environment, and I think I
have some good leadership and management skills. I like the
decision-making, the interaction with clients. I like the operational
aspects of managing a business. That would have been attractive to me
when I was younger.
What are some differences between a typical day in your life now
versus a day in your life 20 years ago?
Twenty years ago, I was just starting out. I was consumed with
work, unfortunately, and I was very much involved clinically with the
patients that I saw. And now, I do things differently. I’m more in
the business environment at this point. I’m involved in managing
large populations of patients rather than individual patients. I’m
involved in some medical policy-making, and I’m also much more
entrepreneurial. Back then, I was more just a worker -- someone
without a long-term vision, just inundated with the responsibilities
of my career.
What is the greatest lesson you’ve learned in your life?
How to get along with people and not to underestimate other people
and how to respect people and their opinions more. The first part of
my life, I was learning and training so much that I never got the
chance to know people very well. I saw large numbers of people who
were sick and treated them for their clinical problems but really
didn’t get to know them better. But now, as I become more involved in
the business side of things, I realize how multidimensional people
are and how much I’ve learned from others. I can easily say that I’ve
learned just as much from my experiences with other people as I have
in the formal education process. Just incidents in my life where I
made decisions in isolation that if I had listened to others, had
interacted with other people, I probably wouldn’t have made.
What do you treasure most?
My relationship with my kids and my wife. I treasure the
opportunities to relax apart from work. And to develop my
intellectual curiosity about learning new things that I never had
time to do before.
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