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Module Descriptions

 

Modules

Other Curricular Elements


 

The Family Medicine Inpatient Service
Residents learn the majority of their acute care hospital medicine on the family medicine inpatient service (FMIS), which is supervised by our attending faculty. Attending physicians in our department are responsible for the hospital care of the patients in our practices. As a member of the team, you will participate in managing hospitalized patients and deciding on the plan for treatment, including whether consultants should be involved. The success of this experience hinges on the teaching and clinical capabilities of the attending faculty and senior residents. Our family practice faculty also supervise the obstetrical care for our patients. An exceptionally strong faculty has allowed us to develop this, which offers a disciplined, scientific approach with a unique family medicine perspective to the practice of medicine. This system retains control of the patient within the family practice attending-resident relationship and facilitates the delegation of progressive responsibility for patient care from attending to resident. Each of the hospitals has an FMIS, which functions as the acute care support for the office practice.

Each FMIS provides exposure to a variety of clinical problems and schedules frequent teaching conferences with family practice and medical subspecialty faculty. Most of the night and weekend call for the FMIS rotations is by beeper and, like real-world family physicians, residents are required to come to the hospital for newly admitted patients, deliveries, or unexpected changes in patient condition.

Critical Care
The modules you spend in critical care will form the foundation for critical care medicine needed in your upper-level years. During this rotation, you will learn how to manage patients with major and multiple organ failure under the guidance of the faculty in the Department of Internal Medicine. Our residents are included as a part of the unit team and are assigned patients in the CCU and ICU. You will learn advanced cardiorespiratory and hemodynamic monitoring and will acquire experience with ventilators, Swan-Ganz catheters, and other invasive technologies. Examples of typical diagnoses include myocardial infarction, pulmonary edema, renal failure, GI bleeding, sepsis, and respiratory failure. On-call averages every fourth night.

Pediatrics
During your pediatric rotation, you will gain confidence in newborn assessment, resuscitation, and stabilization in a busy nursery. The faculty in pediatrics will supervise you as you attend high-risk deliveries and learn how to manage distressed newborns and meconium aspiration. Intubation and line insertions are included. As part of the pediatric team at Children's Hospital and South Buffalo Mercy Hospital, you will learn how to care for the hospitalized infant and child. Fluid and drug calculations, sepsis, diarrhea and dehydration, and asthma/croup/bronchiolitis are examples of conditions that are common on this unit. An ambulatory pediatric rotation emphasizing the common problems seen in office practice is located at South Buffalo Mercy Hospital (SBM). The patients seen in your family medicine center round out your pediatric education with a community element.


Obstetrics and Gynecology
The goal of the three required OB/GYN modules is to provide basic instruction in common problems in gynecology and to develop a capability in normal deliveries. The hospital component includes care of a variety of gynecologic conditions requiring surgical diagnosis or treatment, as well as pre- and post-operative care.

The obstetrical block experiences are concentrated at the Children's Hospital of Buffalo and the Niagara Falls Memorial Medical Center, where large numbers of patients are referred from the prenatal clinics. The family practice residents are supervised in the management of labor and risk assessment. There will be opportunities for you to follow your families from your family medicine center practice and deliver them under the supervision of our faculty in family practice.

Surgery
Your two modules of general surgery are scheduled at Millard Fillmore Suburban Hospital and provide basic experience in emergencies and pre- and post-operative care of patients, including operating room and minor surgery (lumps and bumps) teaching. Continued education in surgery in the family medicine center refines ambulatory surgery skills under the guidance of the family practice faculty.

Geriatrics
Your geriatric experience will be supervised by family physicians with special training in geriatrics. These physicians direct a skilled nursing facility and care for elderly patients with a specially designed hospital team. You will learn about the regulatory and medical issues of these institutions. Home visits, nursing home experience and hospice care are also components of this rotation.

Rural Health
You will have a choice of rural practices for your one module assignment in rural medicine. We have a menu of family practice offices with a strong track record of teaching students and residents. Many practices offer overnight accommodations and most include you in the hospital part of their clinical work.


Community Medicine
The community medicine curriculum offers a variety of exposures. A number of voluntary, governmental, educational, and private organizations participate in the program.
Buffalo: The Personal and Professional Touch
David My initial attraction to the University at Buffalo was its proximity to Rochester, my wife's hometown. But the more I learned about Buffalo's residency program, the more impressed I became. The physicians I encountered here were so enthusiastic about the family medicine programs! And I really liked the "community hospital" feeling of Millard Fillmore Suburban. Also, the fact that UB has an excellent Peds program (my wife was a pediatric resident) made my decision easy.

"While I was in medical school, I found that I enjoyed many different areas of medicine, but I thought I would be bored if I focused on one specific field. This realization led me to choose family medicine. I wanted to be able to know my patients and handle all of their health needs-not simply treat them for a specific ailment and never see them again. I have completed rotations in rural Louisiana, China, and Kenya, and I learned first-hand how exciting and needed family medicine is, particularly in rural areas and underdeveloped countries. I would like to make a difference in the lives of medically underserved people in this country and overseas. UB was and is an excellent choice, both academically and for my long-term career goals."

- David Holmes, M.D. (Graduate, Faculty Member and Physician at Niagara Family Health Center)

Emergency Medicine
During your rotation in emergency medicine, you will be on the front line in the treatment of emergency conditions with faculty who are Board Certified in emergency medicine as your instructors. You will develop a competence in the initial management of serious emergencies.

ENT/Urology, Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Cardiology, Dermatology

Teachers and offices for these core ambulatory experiences are chosen from the University faculty at sites in the Buffalo area that have been shown to excel in teaching family practice residents.

Rehabilitation Medicine
You will be involved in a full scope of rehabilitation activities and will have firsthand exposure to physiatrists, occupational and physical therapists, cardiac rehab, sports injuries, and work hardening programs. You will learn which conditions can be treated, and you will become familiar with the roles of various modalities in treatment.

Conferences
The "university without walls" at Buffalo facilitates the integration of teaching activities at the affiliated hospitals where our residency is based. There are numerous lectures, grand rounds, and clinical case conferences sponsored by the clinical departments that collaborate with us in training.

In addition, the Department of Family Medicine sponsors a core curriculum each Thursday afternoon for all residents. The program operates on a two year cycle and is designed to cover all the basic and clinical science essential to family practice. Residents are released from all rotations so they can attend.


Human Behavior and Mental Health
A comprehensive program in Human Behavior and Mental Health is fully integrated into the three years of the residency. You will have and intern course, large group instruction and small group case discussion in areas including Mental Health, Behavioral Medicine (including health behavior change, death & dying, caregivers, chronic pain, chronic illness, mind-body interactions), Advanced Patient-Centered Interviewing, Family Issues, Violence and Health, Individual and Family development, Use of Community Resources, Medical Ethics and Patient Safety. Training activities include workshops and supervised standardized patient interviews and feedback. Our faculty are cognizant of the stress of residency training and adopt a preventive approach with appropriate supports in the context of advisor/advisee relationship.

 

 

For more information on Residency Training at UB Family Medicine contact Pam Maconaghy
All information © 2005, UB Department of Family Medicine unless otherwise noted.