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Most children do not testify to their parents’ struggles to become doctors. But Dr. Mihail Varshavski He remembers watching his father, a doctor from Russia, to do a medical school and residence in America.
“My father decided to continue medical education, and yet, in a new country, in a new language for a second time in his life, bless his heart,” Varshavski said Fox News Digital. “I fell in love with the field and realized that this was the only thing I wanted to do for the rest of my life.”
Being marked “the sexiest doctor I live” was not part of that plan, but Varshavski took over the superficial attention in a way health information to millions.
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Mihail Varshavski and his parents emigrated from Russia when he was a child, starting their life “completely over”. The experience of watching his father repeats the medical school and residence in his new home was inspired by Varshavski to become a doctor. (Kind Mike/YouTube doctor)
The Varshavski family moved to the United States from Russia when he was six years old, seeking a better life. The transition, however, came with challenges.
“We had to completely restart life from scratch,” he said. His mother, doctorate. Professor of mathematics, he swallowed up the floors to pay the bills while his father, who was a doctor at their homeland, repeated the arduous process to become a doctor again.
Varshavski followed his father’s steps, completing his accelerated, seven -year -old graduation program for life sciences and a doctor for a degree in Osteopathic Medicine at the New York Institute of Technology.
He also built the following on Instagram before he started his place of residence in 2014. Then “15 minutes of glory came,” Varshavski said.
Buzzfeed published The article in August 2015 under the title “mind, you really have to see this hot doctor and his dog”, a compilation of Instagram photographs of Varshavsky and his Husky. The People magazine was called Varshavski the “sexiest doctor alive” in November 2015.
Varshavski took over the surface of the attention. Initially.
“This is not the attention I am trying to get,” he recalled at the time. “I would like to educate people. I want to celebrate health care. I want to put on good information there.”

“I was frustrated when patients hurt me with myths, misinformation,” Varshavski said. So he started his YouTube channel “Dr. Mike”, who now has about 14 million subscribers. (Kindly doctor Mike/Instagram)
The main news and talk shows flew to book it, but the media rage ended quickly. If the “goalkeepers” would not allow him to talk about the topics he cares about – vaccines, nutrition, physical activity – he would have to do it alone, he said.
Launched his YouTube channel, “Dr. Mike”, Inspired by the repetitive topic he noticed in his daily business.
“The patients seduced something they read online or seen on television, usually in the form of late -night information,” he said.
Not only did it distract distract patients from “putting a job such as improving your diet, getting seven to nine hours of sleep, exercise [and] Maintaining a healthy mental condition, “but it also encouraged some to take” questionable medicines and accessories, “Varshavski said.
He realized that more than 30-40 patients he saw every day could come in person. It can now boast about 14 million YouTube subscribers.
“At a time when the first instinct is patients … It’s to look at their phones, I wanted to be there for them,” he said. “Just as family doctors are there for our patients when they are in the hospital, when they are in a nursing home, when they cannot leave their home, and they are tied to the bed, we are there.”

Dr. Varshavski said he wanted to “arrange patients with the best information to make decisions for himself and his loved ones.” (Kindness Dr. Mihail Varshavski)
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In addition to his videos that talk about everything, from high blood pressure to food stickers and responding to popular medical drama or Tikict’s video, Varshavski also interviewed celebrities, medical professionals and political guests, including Dr. Anthony Fauci, former Vice President Kamal Harris and current FDA Commissioner Dr. Marty Makary.
A doctor based in New Jersey still balances his internet glory with work by looking at patients, most of whom do not recognize him as a famous person, Varshavski said.
“Those who recognize me are very excited,” he said. “I can’t tell you how much joy it brings that I have a child who is nervous to burn a doctor, because it’s a doctor who saw on YouTube.”
Varshavski will be on “Fox and friends“On Tuesday, May 27.