About Rosemary E McGeady
Rosemary E McGeady M.D. holds both a medical degree and a law degree. The combination is uncommon. It gives her a perspective few attorneys possess. She speaks the language of clinicians and the language of lawyers.
She earned an M.D. from Saint Louis University in 1982. More than two decades later she returned to formal study in another field and received her law degree from Seton Hall University School of Law in 2005. Those two credentials mark distinct chapters in a professional life that crosses disciplines.
Her education frames much of what follows. The medical training provides grounding in clinical concepts and the realities of patient care. The legal training supplies tools for analysis, advocacy, and interpretation of complex rules. Together they create an unusually broad base for addressing questions where medicine and law intersect.
Over time she has developed an approach that values clear explanation. She tends to break complicated subjects down into concrete elements. That style fits situations where technical medical facts must be translated into legal arguments or policy positions.
Her experience allows her to move between two professional cultures. She understands the constraints that govern clinical decision-making and can also marshal legal frameworks that shape those decisions. That dual literacy proves useful in cases and consultations that touch on licensing, regulatory compliance, standards of care, and other health-related legal matters.
Colleagues and clients have described her as methodical and exacting in her work. She favors careful fact-gathering and structured analysis. In meetings she often focuses on the core issues that will matter in dispute resolution or regulatory review, rather than on peripheral concerns.
Outside of direct casework she has shown an interest in educating others. She communicates complex topics in accessible terms, whether speaking to professional audiences or advising individual clients. Her background positions her to bridge conversations between clinicians, regulators, and legal decision-makers.
She currently practices law addressing matters that intersect health care and legal regulation, applying both her medical and legal training to those issues.