print

Hospital-Based Training

Hospital-based training in the Family Medicine Residency Program includes these specialties:

Adult Medicine

Residents learn how to manage acute and chronic adult medical problems at a community hospital (Highland Hospital) and at various ambulatory office sites.

Inpatient rotations on the adult medical floors consist of two blocks in each of the first, second, and third years. These rotations provide residents with exposure to a variety of common and uncommon problems in adult medicine. Residents also learn the rational use and interpretation of diagnostic procedures and tests. Teaching occurs daily during morning report, noon conference (lunch provided!), and during sign-out rounds. The family medicine chief residents oversee one of two intern reports each week. Reports are attended by interns in family medicine, internal medicine and med/peds. One morning a week, there is a joint medicine-family medicine grand rounds.

Call is every fourth night until 10 p.m. The family medicine teams are usually comprised of one first-year and one second-year resident, with a third-year supervisor. The PGY-1 is paired with a PGY-3 while on call. There is no overnight call on medicine; night floats cover 8:30 p.m to 7:30 a.m. First-year residents take night float responsibilities for one week; second- and third-year residents take two weeks.

The department chair of Internal Medicine at Highland has a strong commitment to primary care and a special interest in geriatrics. Highland has a unit entirely dedicated to acute care for the elderly. It has become a national model for elder care.

The Medical Intensive Care Unit is the setting for training in the management of acute cardiac and pulmonary disease and other complex medical illnesses. One pair of family medicine first-year residents covers the service. Direct supervision comes from a third-year family medicine resident, a pulmonary/critical care fellow, and intensivists working in the 14-bed unit. There is no overnight call for interns. They stay until 5 p.m. or 7 p.m., depending on their partner's schedule. The nursing staff, along with attending physicians from cardiology, pulmonary, and critical care, provide some of the best inpatient teaching for residents. Time away from this busy unit (for office hours) is reduced to one half-day per week. PGY-3s do a combined ICU/Cardiology block. They spend two weeks in each discipline, with ICU overnight call two times during the block.

The Medical Emergency Department (ED) at Highland, site of a PGY-1 rotation, is moderately busy (24,600 visits per year). One-quarter to one-third of the patients are referrals from private physicians; the remainder are walk-ins. When needeed, there is good backup from ED physicians and from subspecialty attendings. There is no overnight call. One PGY-2 in each two-resident team staffs the ED each day from 1 p.m. to 11 p.m. Monday through Saturday. Twice a week, residents participate in city-wide emergency medicine conferences.

back to top

Pediatrics

Historically, the pediatric training of residents at this Family Medicine Program has been tightly integrated with the pediatric residency program of the University of Rochester. It's a wonderful environment for learning. The care of children is undergoing rapid transition, as new antibiotics, immunizations, and attitudes are introduced. The care of sick children is increasingly moving to an outpatient world. But pediatrics training at Rochester still has a wide base, including inpatient and outpatient services at Strong Memorial and Rochester General Hospitals, our office community practice, and community-based sites.

In the last two years of residency training, there are two inpatient pediatric rotations -- one at Strong Memorial (second year) and one at Rochester General (third year). The month at Strong is on the general pediatric service, where pediatric PGY-3s are the supervising residents. Call is every fourth night, with backup from pediatric residents. Teaching includes attending rounds, morning sign-in rounds, and several weekly conferences. The pediatric floors are all in one section of the fourth floor at trong, and provide a very intimate feel that is remarkable in such a big hospital.

In the third year, residents are supervising residents for pediatric PGY-1s on the pediatric floor at Rochester General. This rotation provides a well-balanced mix of general pediatric problems that are characteristic of a community hospital. The size of the service usually allows time for using the library to pursue more in-depth answers to questions raised by patients' problems. Call during this PGY-3 block is approximately every fourth night overnight and includes delivery room coverage. All of the residents on pediatric services attend morning report. This gives residents rotating in the pediatric emergency or special care nursery an opportunity to connect with each other.

Our residents spend one month in their first year at the special care nursery at Rochester General, a level II nursery. PGY-1s work with a pediatric PGY-3. They learn the essentials of care for premature infants, newborns with sepsis, and infants with congenital problems, hyperbilirubinemia and more. They also assist with resuscitation of newborns from high-risk deliveries. The nursing staff places most IVs. Call is every fourth night, and includes admissions to the general pediatric floor, with resident backup.

For one block in the second and third years, residents rotate through the Pediatric Emergency Department and Pediatric Outpatient Departments at Rochester General. The ambulatory clinic is one of the outpatient teaching sites for the pediatric residents; staff attendings are always available. The ED has attending backup 24 hours a day, so there is easy access to teaching for residents. This very busy ED provides experience in a wide range of primary care problems, including orthopaedics. Residents cover both day and night shifts (which do not exceed 12 hours). Additional experiences in pediatrics include outpatient subspecialty clinics at Strong.

Second-year residents do an Ambulatory Pediatrics block focusing on well-child care, developmental pediatrics, and adolescent medicine. This rotation also includes school health experiences and scheduled sessions in the office of pediatric subspecialists. During this block, residents take call for the family medicine outpatient practice.

Pediatric ambulatory care is a focus of training in our office practices. Residents learn the essentials of well-child care, including normal and abnormal development and anticipatory guidance. They learn to manage the acute and chronic illnesses of childhood. Precepting is provided by the family medicine faculty and a pediatrician. Nurse practitioners are also a valuable resource, particularly for well-child care and anticipatory guidance.

The Special Care Nursery rotation at Highland is required for third-year residents who have opted to not pursue obstetrical training beyond the required two blocks of obstetrics and one block of gynecology. Residents work with a perinatologist and neonatal nurse practitioner. They manage common newborn problems and practice assessing the newborn.

back to top

Obstetrics and Gynecology

OB/GYN training, one of the strengths of the Family Medicine Program, occurs at Highland Hospital. OB/GYN residents are usually scheduled for surgeries during the day, so it is primarily the Family Medicine residents who run the deck during the day. Both departments long ago realized this interdependence, so congenial relations between residents and attendings is the rule, not the exception. Nurse-midwives are also a constant presence on the labor deck and add to the rich diversity of obstetrical approaches.

In this busy service, residents generally experience 100 to 150 deliveries in their six blocks on service over three years. That number includes a modest number of vacuum-extraction deliveries. It is common for interns to have over 80 deliveries in their first two months.

As of July 2006, the rotation is completed in a series of day and night shifts with no 24-hour calls. The role of the residents is split into First Call and Second Call, with specific pagers and responsibilities assigned to each. First Call is responsible foe the care of the patients on the labor floor, OB triage, the postpartum unit, the GYN pre-op/post-op floors, and the GYN ED. Often there are multiple residents who divide the responsibilities with the non-call residents seeing patients in OB triage or the ED, so that the First Call can focus on labor management and deliveries. The Second Call role is taken by senior OB Track Family Medicine residents, Fellows, or OB/GYN residents and involves the management of high-risk patients and first-assisting at Caesarean deliveries. An attending obstetrician is in the hospital 24 hours a day for emergency backup. All Family Medicine residents do two blocks on the OB/GYN service and one block of GYN, during which they take some of the shifts on labor and delivery (see below). Those planning to provide maternity care in their practices generally take the OB Track and do an additional three OB blocks—for a total of six. After four blocks of first call, residents take second call on the labor and delivery service.

Most residents who pursue OB training manage deliveries for 15 to 25 of their own patients over the three years. Dr. Eisinger, the obstetrician on our faculty, is available for consulting on OB and GYN problems encountered in the office. Family Medicine faculty are present to assist in all continuity deliveries, and Dr. Eisinger attempts to provide dedicated backup in the event of problems during labor and delivery. Having an obstetrician on faculty allows us to follow high-risk patients at Lovejoy Family Medicine.

Additionally, our Assistant Residency Director, Dr. Smith, has Caesarean privileges at Highland Hospital, supervises the care of prenatal patients at our Brown Square site, and assists in the outpatient management of high-risk pregnancies at Brown Square.

Residents from Lovejoy Family Medicine may participate in an optional maternity training experience at Brown Square. Four to five senior residents provide continuity OB care to patients whose pregnancies are often complicated by either medical or psychosocial factors at a federally designated Community Health Center. This training counts as a required Community Medicine project, and the deliveries count towards a resident's continuity panel. Residents say this additional training among a less-served population greatly enhances their OB experience.

Our Gynecology teaching is concentrated in a block rotation during the second year. This block includes experiences in areas such as reproductive endocrinology, colposcopy, OB ultrasound, contraception, and urology. Residents take first call on the labor floor during the rotation. Residents can elect to be scheduled for longitudinal training in medical and surgical abortions. Other residents, who choose not to participate in abortion training, can be scheduled for alternative gynecological experiences.

back to top

Surgery

Our surgical training is focused on assessment and management of surgical problems in the ambulatory setting. We also provide experience in assisting in the operating room.

During the first year, residents work for one block in a busy emergency room at Rochester General. They evaluate and treat surgical problems under the supervision of an emergency room surgical attending. Emphasis is on the management of wounds and fractures. Shifts are scheduled in the afternoon and evening, with no overnight call. During the surgical emergency block rotation, residents work two weekend shifts in the Highland emergency room. They see surgical patients under the supervision of an emergency room attending physician.

The first year also includes a second surgical block rotation. The family medicine resident becomes a member of the inpatient surgical team at Highland Hospital. During the rotation, the resident assists in general surgeries and learns how to care for pre- and post-operative patients.

Finally, our South Avenue ambulatory care site is equipped for outpatient surgical procedures. We routinely suture lacerations, excise skin lesions, and perform other minor surgeries.

back to top

Geriatrics

Training in geriatrics is one of the lesser known strengths of the Family Medicine Residency Program and occurs in a variety of settings. It uses both continuity and block experiences, and relies heavily on the resources of the Jewish Home of Rochester and the Highland Family Health Center.

In the third year, residents do a one-month Block Rotation in Geriatrics. It provides training in geriatric mental health care, rehabilitation, and end-of-life care. Add to that a more intensive experience in day-to-day nursing home care. Family Medicine residents are encouraged and expected to become part of the clinical-care team, addressing day-to-day as well as long-term needs of the nursing home residents and the facility. Several specialty clinics are held at the Jewish Home. Residents also work one-on-one at the bedside with nurses and medical assistants.

In the outpatient setting, our residents see a wide range of ambulatory geriatric medical issues. They also participate in functional assessments and home visits for the elderly. A fellowship-trained geriatrician, a graduate of our program, supervises residents on home visits.

Electives are available for residents with an interest in geriatrics. They are typically designed by the resident and a geriatrician.