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MEDICAL RESIDENCY - 2007 Curriculum
Designed around the six general competencies (medical knowledge,
patient care, interpersonal skills and communication, system based
practice, practice based learning and professionalism), our curriculum
accentuates feedback and evaluation that are crucial to any learning
environment. Teaching attendings, ambulatory preceptors and supervising
residents provide periodic feedback sessions to facilitate individualized
learning and ongoing evaluation. Histories and physical examinations
are observed and periodically videotaped for peer review. All interns
take part in two Observed Structural Clinical Exercises (OSCE) of
basic skills, and are observed conducting four history and physical
examinations. Each house officer is paired with a faculty advisor
who plays an advocacy role and assists with curricular goals as
well as career planning.
Sample Rotation Schedule
Inpatient Rotations
Outpatient Experiences
Seminars and Didactics
Medicine and Population Health
Sample Rotation Schedule
The following chart indicates the sample distribution of time devoted
to the various clinical experiences during the three training years.
Each year is divided into 12 blocks, each approximately one month
in length.
The schedule of inpatient coverage is organized to minimize stress
by reducing the weekly work hours and consecutive daily hours and
by limiting the number of admissions. Ancillary services are readily
accessible on a 24-hour basis.
Accommodations are made for coverage during illness and for parental
leave. The inventive Intern Support Group is praised yearly by interns
as an invaluable source of peer help throughout the year.
Clinical Experiences Number Rotations/Year
|
PGY1
|
PGY2
|
PGY3
|
Inpatient
Medicine *
|
4
|
2
|
1
|
| Critical
Care Medicine |
2
|
1
|
0.5
|
| Step-Down
Unit at MGH |
-
|
1
|
-
|
| Emergency
Room |
0.5
|
-
|
-
|
Day
float/Emergency medicine
|
-
|
0.5
|
1
|
| Night
Intern |
0.5
|
-
|
-
|
| Night
Resident |
-
|
1.5
|
1.5
|
| Mental
Health and Addictions |
1
|
-
|
-
|
| Geriatrics**
|
-
|
1
|
-
|
Elective**
|
1
|
3
|
4.5
|
|
Ambulatory** |
2
|
2
|
3
|
| Ambulatory
Teaching Resident |
-
|
-
|
0.5
|
| Vacation
|
1
|
**
|
**
|
| Total
Blocks |
12
|
12
|
12
|
|
* Inpatient medicine rotations are divided between the Cambridge
and Somerville campuses. |
|
** PGY 2 and 3 Vacation time is taken during these designated
blocks. |
Clinical Rotations
Cambridge Health Alliance training programs provide an excellent
foundation for those pursuing academic and/or community-based primary
care or internal medicine subspecialties. This training experience
gives residents direct patient responsibility in both hospital and
ambulatory care settings, enhancing their knowledge of medicine
and patient care. Faculty foster a spirit of inquiry and learning
and develop close collegial relationships with the house staff.
Two PGY4 Chief Residents and medical students in a variety of capacities
in the inpatient and outpatient environment further enhance the
spirit of teaching and learning.
Inpatient Rotations
The medical units provide a rigorous experience caring for patients
with a broad assortment of acute and complex problems. House officers
and attending staff share responsibility for all patients; only
house staff write orders.
The Cambridge Hospital Wards: Medical teams consist of a resident
and two interns. Interns take overnight call only once in 14 days.
A night intern, supported by night residents, is an integrated member
of the team in a system that promotes continuity of care overnight
and models effective collaboration among providers. A unique combination
of primary care providers and hospitalists contribute to the academic
rigor of the inpatient experience and facilitate resident understanding
of the continuum of medical care.
The Somerville Hospital Wards: Two interns work under direct
supervision of the hospitalist attending physician. There is no
overnight call. At Somerville, interns carry a load of four patients
each. The reduced patient load makes possible such curricular innovation
as patient home visits and hospital quality improvement projects.
Intensive Care at The Cambridge Hospital Campus: The intensive
care unit provides sophisticated, intensive monitoring and treatment
for critically ill patients. The ICU team, consisting of one resident
and three interns, is supervised by a dedicated pulmonary-critical
care specialist who serves as the attending of record on all ICU
patients. This intensivist leads daily multidisciplinary work rounds
and delivers a didactic ICU curriculum on core critical care topics.
Residents gain substantial experience performing complex procedures.
Interns take call twice a week and go home after rounds the following
day.
Step Down unit at Massachusetts General Hospital: Second
year residents rotate through this tertiary care step down unit
to further hone their skills in management of acutely ill cardiac
care patients.
Liaison Psychiatry: Two staff psychiatrists, a psychiatric
nurse, a PGY3 psychiatry Resident, Harvard medical students and
a PGY1 medical Resident comprise the liaison psychiatry service.
House officers learn to evaluate and treat many of the behavioral,
cognitive and forensic problems common to hospitalized patients.
Elective Rotations: Residents avail themselves of a myriad
of opportunities at Cambridge Health Alliance, in the Greater Boston
area, and in international settings during their elective time.
Residents may rotate to the tertiary care Harvard hospitals for
inpatient subspecialty consultation experiences. Residents also
use elective time to work on their scholarly projects. 
Outpatient Experiences
Structured block rotations provide additional experiences in ambulatory
medicine and the associated medical and non-medical specialties.
Interns participate in one continuity clinic per week. At the start
of the PGY2, they add a second continuity clinic, typically at the
same site. Special programs are also available in health promotion
and disease prevention, occupational and environmental health, women's
health, and public health-including AIDS/HIV care and tuberculosis.
Continuity Clinics: Residents build a panel of patients
in their continuity clinics. At all clinical sites, the Resident
becomes a member of a caregiving team consisting of a staff physician,
psychiatrist, nurse practitioner and a social worker. Sites include:
The Primary Care Center (PCC) - based at the new state-of-the-art
Ambulatory Care Center at The Cambridge Hospital. The PCC facility
serves our multicultural patient populations who make over 20,000
visits per year.
Neighborhood Health Centers (NHC) - Residency training is
offered at several of the NHC's that are located in our richly diverse
neighborhoods. They are clinically and administratively integrated
with the hospital and offer excellent training sites particularly
for those interested in cross-cultural medicine or community outreach.
Somerville Primary Care (SPC) - Clinic serves the Somerville
community with cultural sensitivity and attention to academic rigor
applied to primary care.
Harvard Vanguard Medical Associates (HVMA) - HVMA is a pre-paid
closed panel HMO. The HVMA internists are members of the medical
staff at Cambridge Health Alliance.
Cambridge Family Health - This group practice includes graduates
of this training program and provides comprehensive child and adult
care one block from the hospital.
Ambulatory Block Rotations: Residents gain intensive exposure
to a variety of specialties relevant to outpatient practice, including
rheumatology, orthopedics, office gynecology, ENT, dermatology,
neurology, oncology, endocrinology, occupational and environmental
health, ophthalmology, pulmonary medicine and gastroenterology.
During the ambulatory block rotations, residents also participate
in a number of well supervised multidisciplinary care programs including
HIV care and tuberculosis clinic.
Cambridge Occupational and Environmental Health Program (OEHP)
- Basic principles of recognizing and preventing occupational health
diseases are integrated into primary care training through a lecture
series and clinical experiences. Residents may participate in work
site evaluations and projects in this elective.
Public Health - The Department of Medicine is involved in
public health education about the spread of HIV-related illness,
of tuberculosis and other communicable diseases. Other public health
projects include immigrant health, diabetes, health concerns of
men of color, CHF and pediatric asthma. Residents have the opportunity
to see patients along with public health specialists and to devise
educational interventions working in concert with many community
programs such as the Institute for Community Health and the AIDS
Task Force.
Addictions Medicine - PGY1 Residents consult on patients
in withdrawal, many of whom have polydrug abuse as well as significant
additional medical problems. Interns participate in individual and
group counseling and family meetings, learn about community substance
abuse prevention and treatment resources. Interns also gain exposure
to methadone maintenance programs.
Women's Health Elective - PGY2 or PGY3 Residents may devote
one elective block to a concentrated exposure to women's health.
A multi-disciplinary faculty emphasizes the holistic care of women,
and the principles of an integrated community-based approach to
women's health.
Geriatrics - The geriatrics rotation in the PGY2 year emphasizes
community-based care and both outpatient and inpatient consultation.
The faculty emphasize interdisciplinary evaluation of the common
problems of the frail elderly, neuropsychiatric assessment and rehabilitation.
Emergency Department at The Cambridge Hospital Campus -
The state-of-the-art emergency department at The Cambridge Hospital
is staffed 24 hours a day by attending physicians who supervise
medical residents and interns. Residents manage acute medical and
surgical problems in this busy emergency room (averaging over 70
visits/day). The full-time Medical Director and Educational Director
provide an ongoing program of peer review and didactic conferences.

Seminars and didactics
In addition to weekly grand rounds there are a variety of didactic
conferences which include: morbidity and mortality conference; journal
club; psychiatry liaison rounds; and a variety of subspecialty conferences.
A unique weekly Intern Report delivers a curriculum to meet Interns'
needs.
Further education is provided through case reviews and peer reviews.
Residents in outpatient settings participate in an hour-long, multidisciplinary
case review conference at the conclusion of each ambulatory care
session. Both psychiatric and medical preceptors participate. Peer
review of charts or videotaped interviews are conducted weekly.
On the inpatient service, teaching rounds and 1:1 precepting augment
the daily morning report.
Inpatient Service
| 7:45 |
Morning
Report |
| 8:45 |
Radiology
Rounds |
| 9:00 |
Work
Rounds (with the Hospitalist on post-call days) |
| 10:30
|
Multidisciplinary
Rounds |
| 12:30
|
Noon
Conference |
| 2:30
|
Visit
Rounds |
(1:1 Teaching with the Ward Visit approximately once/ week)
Ambulatory Services
| 8:00 |
Ambulatory
Report |
| 4:30
|
Multidisciplinary
Conference (after each clinic session) |
Thursday Morning Ambulatory Conferences
| 8:45 |
Peer
Review or Videotaped Interview Review |
| 10:15
|
Managed
Care/Practice Management/Behavioral Medicine
Seminars or Project Presentations |
| 11:15
|
Ambulatory
Medicine Seminar |

Nurturing Residents' Areas of Special Interest in
Medicine and Population Health
We believe that fostering the growth of the resident involves not
only supporting their progress in the core internal medicine competencies,
but also nurturing their interests in special areas of medicine
and population health. In parallel to the core medical program,
we identify with the residents their special emphasis areas (SEA),
and then create individualized educational plans that facilitate
experiences, rotations, projects and mentoring, both within and
outside Cambridge Health Alliance, that nurture their individual
interests. Some of the topic areas for these special emphasis areas
include (but are not limited to): women's health, health care policy
and advocacy; occupational & environmental medicine; international
health; cultural competency; geriatric medicine; preventive cardiology;
medical education; patient education; pulmonary medicine; and humanities
in medicine.
Examples of SEA programs include:
1) Several residents expressed strong interests in health care
advocacy. One of the residents, along with a faculty advisor, organized
and implemented a one month elective rotation (5 residents participated
in the elective) in which they learned and expanded advocacy skills
(writing, speaking, resources, being interviewed by media, etc)
and started an advocacy project. The elective also included attending
the American Public Health Association meetings in Washington, DC
and lobbying congress about health care issues.
2) Several residents over the years have expressed interest in
Occupational and Environmental Medicine, and have attended Occupational
& Environmental Medicine clinic (some as a longitudinal experience),
and completed OEM-related projects.
3) One resident had multiple related interests in pain management,
geriatrics, and end-of-life care. She was connected with a psychiatrist
who runs a palliative care fellowship at another Harvard teaching
hospital, and plans to set up a rotation at this outside hospital
in palliative care, and explore it as a future career option.
4) Residents interested in women's health have been given opportunities
for experiences and mentorship at Cambridge Health Alliance, but
also at programs/clinics at Massachusetts General Hospital and Boston
University Medical Center.

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