2022 House of Delegates Candidate
Marion E. Mass, MD - Marion Mass attended Penn State University, Duke Medical School and did her training in pediatrics at Northwestern’s Robert Lurie Children’s Hospital. She has practiced in the hospital, ER, nursery, delivery room, outpatient practice, and urgent care settings.
She twice run non-partisan symposiums on Medical Care at the Library of Congress in Washington DC. Most recently at the Free2care conference in, 2019 and been instrumental to free2care's growth to include 70,000 physicians and 8 million citizens nationwide. Free2care is prepping for their next symposium in September.
She has published multiple times regarding improving cost and access to care in the Wall Street Journal, Philadelphia Inquirer, The Hill, Washington Times, Penn Live, and the Washington Examiner. She is on the editorial board for the Bucks County Courier times and Doylestown Intelligencer. She is on the board of the Bucks County Health Improvement Partnership, an organization that addresses medical care gaps at the county level. Her work exposing the Pharmacy Benefit Managers as cost drivers has led to her being a guest on numerous podcasts and she has testified twice in Harrisburg on the topic.
Marion is the winner of the 2018 R William Alexander Award, recognized by her Pennsylvania peers as contributing heavily to political advocacy in healthcare, and has served as a Pa Medical Society delegate for the last 4 years. She is the 2021 co-winner of Healthcare Leader of the year for Physician Outlook Magazine and American College of Healthcare Trustees, and a 2020 top 100 healthcare Leader at International Forum of Advancements in Healthcare.
She was instrumental in bringing the independent film "Do No Harm" regarding the epidemic of physicians committing suicide to be shown at a joint meeting of the Bucks and Montgomery County Medical Societies, and she has twice served on national panels for the filmmaker. She co-founded the grassroots Practicing Physicians of America with Dr. Westby Fisher, M.D., of Chicago in 2017, and continues to advocate that physicians join their state societies as well as grassroots groups.
She advises multiple lawmakers at the state and national level.
She and her husband Stephen C. Mass, M.D., an otolaryngologist, have practiced in Bucks County for over 23 years. They have three children, 23, 21, and 18.
She twice run non-partisan symposiums on Medical Care at the Library of Congress in Washington DC. Most recently at the Free2care conference in, 2019 and been instrumental to free2care's growth to include 70,000 physicians and 8 million citizens nationwide. Free2care is prepping for their next symposium in September.
She has published multiple times regarding improving cost and access to care in the Wall Street Journal, Philadelphia Inquirer, The Hill, Washington Times, Penn Live, and the Washington Examiner. She is on the editorial board for the Bucks County Courier times and Doylestown Intelligencer. She is on the board of the Bucks County Health Improvement Partnership, an organization that addresses medical care gaps at the county level. Her work exposing the Pharmacy Benefit Managers as cost drivers has led to her being a guest on numerous podcasts and she has testified twice in Harrisburg on the topic.
Marion is the winner of the 2018 R William Alexander Award, recognized by her Pennsylvania peers as contributing heavily to political advocacy in healthcare, and has served as a Pa Medical Society delegate for the last 4 years. She is the 2021 co-winner of Healthcare Leader of the year for Physician Outlook Magazine and American College of Healthcare Trustees, and a 2020 top 100 healthcare Leader at International Forum of Advancements in Healthcare.
She was instrumental in bringing the independent film "Do No Harm" regarding the epidemic of physicians committing suicide to be shown at a joint meeting of the Bucks and Montgomery County Medical Societies, and she has twice served on national panels for the filmmaker. She co-founded the grassroots Practicing Physicians of America with Dr. Westby Fisher, M.D., of Chicago in 2017, and continues to advocate that physicians join their state societies as well as grassroots groups.
She advises multiple lawmakers at the state and national level.
She and her husband Stephen C. Mass, M.D., an otolaryngologist, have practiced in Bucks County for over 23 years. They have three children, 23, 21, and 18.