Is it safe to visit your mom on Mother's Day? A doctor offers this checklist.

Girl wearing a mask is taking a selfie for mother's day during COVID-19.
(Image credit: Shutterstock)

As a physician, mother, daughter and socially responsible human, I’m finding Mother’s Day to be complicated for me this year, as it is for millions. Questions of whether and how to see my adult children and my own elderly mother present medical and ethical quandaries. As an associate professor of family medicine with a focus on wellness, as Mother’s Day approaches, I’d like to share with you my thinking about this using some tools to aid discernment.

Wouldn’t it be great if choosing time with parents or offspring were ever an easy decision to make? However, the answer is rarely that simple. This year, in the midst of a global pandemic and the need to continue to practice social distancing, the decision is even more complex than usual.

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Claudia Finkelstein
Associate Professor of Family Medicine, Michigan State University

Dr. Claudia Finkelstein is an associate professor of Medicine at Michigan State University. Dr. Finkelstein earned her M.D.C.M. at McGill University in Montreal, Canada. Her current main area of interest is that of physician health, believing that well-adjusted, resilient, thriving physicians will provide excellent care to their patients, teaching to their trainees, and a positive presence to their loved ones. She is currently expanding the wellness work to include all of those involved in the dynamic world of medical education and research.