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Philosophy and Goals of Training
The University of Chicago training program is dedicated toward achieving
three predominant aims: excellence in patient care, leadership in medical
research, and distinction in scholarship and education.
The emphasis is on learning by doing and this educational philosophy of
resident autonomy and responsibility runs through all three years of the
program. Residents are constantly challenged to solve problems on their
own, but are backed by an accessible, full-time faculty interested in
and responsible for teaching residents.
Vital Statistics
- The Department of Medicine has 46
first year residency positions (35 categorical including 6 physician
scientists, 7 preliminary, and 4 medicine/pediatrics) and maintains
196 beds at the University of Chicago Medical Center.
- Medical patients are assigned to
a first-year resident (intern) who are supervised by an advanced resident
and an attending physician.
- First year residents typically admit
5 new patients per night on call and care for 7-10 patients at a time.
- First year residents typically spend
4 weeks exclusively at the Primary Care Group. This ambulatory block
serves as an essential orientation to outpatient primary care.
- This curriculum continues in the
second and third years of training with two months each year dedicated
to ambulatory training.
- Continuity clinic begins during
the first year, where first year residents acquire a cohort of patients
that they will follow throughout the three years of training
- Subspecialty training at the University
of Chicago Medical Center is distinctive because the Sections of Cardiology
and Hematology/Oncology each operate discrete inpatient services. The
other sections are combined into the general medicine services, assuring
residents of rigorous training in a broad range of medical problems.
- Each section in the Department of
Medicine has its own outpatient clinic and consultation service.
- University of Chicago residents
have one to two, month-long rotations at MacNeal Hospital, a 427-bed
hospital in Chicago's western suburbs.
- The Section of Pulmonary and Critical
Care Medicine directs a 16-bed intensive care unit, in which patients
from all services receive care.
- The cardiac care unit has 9 beds
fully equipped for invasive hemodynamic and electrophysiologic monitoring.
- Interns participate in a geriatrics
curriculum through a 4-week outpatient rotation at the Windermere and
South Shore Health Centers. This rotation also includes formal nursing
home and hospice experiences.
- Over three years, each categorical
resident has access to three full research/elective months, the maximum
allowed by the American Board of Internal Medicine.
- The housestaff program is in accord
with the requirements of the American Board of Internal Medicine. The
program is fully accredited by the Accreditation Council for Graduate
Medical Education.
Rotations
Day In The Life
Teaching Conferences
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