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There is a PM&R PASSOR spine fellowship position available in California. The fellow will spend time doing EMGs and spinal procedures. please pm me if interested
Interesting - why did you and Chris opt for the ACGME accredited spots, as opposed to this one? Other than locations, how will this be different from the training you anticipate receiving there?TITLE
The UCLA PMR Spine Medicine Fellowship Program
DESCRIPTION
The UCLA PMR Spine Medicine Fellowship Program is designed to train a prospective fellow in multidisciplinary approaches to the management of non-operative spine diseases. This is a non-ACGME program, which will begin its inaugural class starting July 7, 2008.
The spine fellow will work with physiatrists, anesthesiologists, neurologists, Orthopaedic surgeons, Neurosurgeons, psychiatrists and psychologists in obtaining expertise in multidisciplinary spine management. The non-operative program training will include the prescription of physical therapy/modalities as well as obtain exposure to the use of narcotics and adjuvant medications when addressing patients with spine issues. Training in interventional spine procedures (epidurals, etc ), Electrodiagnostic Medicine and surgical procedures (Dorsal Column Stimulators) will also be emphasized.
A large focus will also be dedicated to the learning of Electrodiagnostic Studies and the how to work up a patient with spine pain to include differential diagnosis for musculoskeletal disease entities that mimic symptoms of spinal radiculopathy (carpal tunnel syndrome, shoulder impingement, and hip pain, etc ). Furthermore, in addition to general musculoskeletal disorders, there will be some exposure to spinal source headaches and palliative and cancer spine pain. The Spine fellow will also be responsible for the coordination of patient care between various services and assist in the education of PM&R residents as well as medical students.
TRAINING CENTERS:
1. Santa Monica UCLA Medical Center and Orthopaedic Hospital
2. Los Angeles Spine Institute
3. Beverly Hills Orthopaedic Group
GOALS:
The goals and objectives for the Spine Medicine Fellow are:
To gain the fundamental knowledge base required for the practice of comprehensive spine pain medicine.
To acquire the skills of patient assessment necessary for the provision of optimal treatment plans in spine pain patients.
To gain sufficient skill and judgment to ensure the appropriate use and application of the various spine pain management interventions and procedures that are considered a standard-of-care.
To gain an understanding of the multidisciplinary nature of spinal pain management, and to be able to coordinate and function in a collaborative fashion with other healthcare professionals.
To be gain competency in the prescription of medications, modalities, therapies, relating to spinal pain management.
To gain competency is basic electrodiagnostic skills for use with spinal disorder work up.
All interested applicants should send or fax the following information:
1. Cover Letter and Statement of Purpose
2. Curriculum Vitae (Please include all contact numbers and e-mail)
3. 3 letters of recommendation
4. Relevant information such as Board Scores, Honor Certificates, and
Diplomas
5. USMLE 3 parts and SAE scores
6. Deans Letter from Medical School
7. Medical School Transcript
For all general program inquiries please contact:
Dr. David Fish, Program Director: [email protected]
I personally believe this is an artificial distinction. For instance, CRPS, while presenting peripherally, generally is addressed centrally. Likewise the vast majority of interventions done for headaches address the cervicogenic variety (a subset the average neurologist has very little experience with).Sounds similar to a previous thread about the Cleveland Clinc and their new "spine" fellowship.
I'm sure the UCLA spine fellowship will provide great training.
It just begs the question:
Is there an existing body of knowledge of sufficient depth to create non-operative spine specialists separate from Pain Medicine Specialists?
Some would say yes.
For those who want to perform interventional pain procedures, I suggest to stay away from non accredited "fellowships".
Sounds like an excellent reason to do your procedures in the local ASC, but not a terribly good rationale for obtaining less than optimal training.Our hospital requires ABMS pain certification in order to perform neuroaxial procedures. I see more hospitals following this trend in the future. For those who want to perform interventional pain procedures, I suggest to stay away from non accredited "fellowships".
I personally believe this is an artificial distinction. For instance, CRPS, while presenting peripherally, generally is addressed centrally. Likewise the vast majority of interventions done for headaches address the cervicogenic variety (a subset the average neurologist has very little experience with).
Admittedly, cancer and peds are different, and those may well be where an ACGME Pain fellowships excel, but for the vast majority of pain practitioners , those subjects do not amount to more than 1-2% of their practice, and so, I would contend, ought not to dictate the type of training one seeks out.
BTW, there is nothing NEW about the Cleveland Clinic's spine fellowship (if you look, you will see it listed on the Pain Rounds Interventional Physiatry Fellowship directory (http://painrounds.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=22&Itemid=28), and that has not been updated in SEVERAL years)
Baylor, MCV, and now UCLA are new within the past year, but I believe the Cleveland Clinic fellowship has existed for quite some time
Sounds like an excellent reason to do your procedures in the local ASC, but not a terribly good rationale for obtaining less than optimal training.
Given that only a few PM&R-based ACGME-accredited fellowships remain, it strikes me that a lawsuit is inevitable, should a medical staff actually try and refuse a felowship-trained interventionist privileges. I such a suit were to allege restraint of trade and violations of antitrust law, it might well be successful.
wrong.
this topic has been covered ad nauseum, but to state the above is irresponsible.
I am struck that the only difference between pain fellowships and spine fellowships is that one is eligible for ACGME accreditation, and one is not.
Practices distinguish themselves as "spine" if they do not want to focus their efforts on opioid renewals. I don't think that makes them "lite" or any less sophisticated than their pain colleagues.
In my community, patients are sent to the spinal interventionist for diagnostic and therapeutic injections. If they work, great. If they don't they are then sent back to the spine surgeon, who either operates, or sends them on to the pain doc, who usually employs medication management as his primary therapeutic modality.
Given the surgical nature of pumps and stims, as well as the arthroscopic procedures folks like Algos perform, I have never thought "Non-Operative spine" was a reasonable descriptor of what we do. It has the same ring to it as "Orthopaedic Medicine", a term physiatrists and chiropractors have both used to try and poach patients from the orthopods
Is there an existing body of knowledge of sufficient depth to create non-operative spine specialists separate from Pain Medicine Specialists?
i think that everyone would agree that there are SOME interventional spine fellowships that provide better training for spine disorders than SOME acgme accredited pain programs. higher volume, more emphasis on physical exam, broader exposure to procedures, etc. the interventional spine fellow could therefore learn more in-depth spine care and sacrifice expertise in opioid management, cancer pain, facial pain, etc.
just because you complete an ACGME accredited pain fellowship does not mean that you are necessarily better or more qualified to perform these neuraxial procedures. a hospital-based, anesthesia run, pain department at a large academic center may think so. fine. no problem with that. ill do my procedures in the office or ASC and get the lion's share of the reimbursement.
paindefender needs to get off of his high - "I AM THE ANESTHESIA PAIN GOD AND ALL LOWLY PHYSIATRISTS MUST KNEEL BEFORE ME!!!!" - horse.
i think that everyone would agree that there are SOME interventional spine fellowships that provide better training for spine disorders than SOME acgme accredited pain programs. higher volume, more emphasis on physical exam, broader exposure to procedures, etc. the interventional spine fellow could therefore learn more in-depth spine care and sacrifice expertise in opioid management, cancer pain, facial pain, etc.
SSdoc33, you need to be informed that paindefender is 100% troll. He/she/it consistently trolls on this forum. paindefender is almost as inflammatory as paz and almost as inflamed as gorback...😛😛😛
paindefender needs to get off of his high - "I AM THE ANESTHESIA PAIN GOD AND ALL LOWLY PHYSIATRISTS MUST KNEEL BEFORE ME!!!!" - horse.
I think paindefender is a Physiatrist.
One that's angry about having had to train on the East Coast or something.
No doubt, but what is best for the LONG-TERM?? Does the health care system really NEED this? Are patients better served by having Pain Specialists and Interventional Spine Specialists? Should IS fellowships become ACGME-accredited? Why or why not?
My proposed solution is to roll what gets covered in an interventional spine fellowship back into the core PM&R training as the overwhelming majority of interventional spine fellowships are run by physiatrists or physiatry groups. If that means taking away from traditional neurorehab, then those residents who feel like their neurorehab training was insufficient to prepare them for practice can do a fellowship...![]()
Neither neurology nor anesthesia academic programs sponsor interventional spine fellowships--only physiatry does. Yet, all three specialties sponsor pain fellowships...
Why does physiatry feel the need to create "something out of nothing?" Does the field *REALLY* need another sub-specialty? 🙄
No doubt, but what is best for the LONG-TERM?? Does the health care system really NEED this? Are patients better served by having Pain Specialists and Interventional Spine Specialists? Should IS fellowships become ACGME-accredited? Why or why not?
My proposed solution is to roll what gets covered in an interventional spine fellowship back into the core PM&R training as the overwhelming majority of interventional spine fellowships are run by physiatrists or physiatry groups. If that means taking away from traditional neurorehab, then those residents who feel like their neurorehab training was insufficient to prepare them for practice can do a fellowship...
Neither neurology nor anesthesia academic programs sponsor interventional spine fellowships--only physiatry does. Yet, all three specialties sponsor pain fellowships...
Why does physiatry feel the need to create "something out of nothing?" Does the field *REALLY* need another sub-specialty? 🙄
Disciple said:Are you a Physiatrist, Paindefender?
Paindefender said:I would rather work in Mcdonald's
Res ipsa loquitur
With what's described above (new UCLA fellowship), it sounds like the spine fellow would be doing basic leftover procedures from the pain fellowship and that the spine fellow would be doing the same spine rotation as the pain fellows except for 12 months instead of 3. Alot of the argument on "spine" vs "pain" is based on perception as variety/depth of skills and knowledge are highly variable, and what's described above makes it sound like the fellowship is geared more toward what some may see as Pain Medicine lite.
I agree with the AAPMR/PASSOR focus away from pain and more to the spine/MSK, but have felt that this is short sighted.
Well, I appreciate everyone's input. I guess I can only summarize my Spine Fellowship as an opportunity. I had the opportunity to give someone an great experience and could not find an ACGME label for it. While this fellowship in spine has new attending staff that the current pain fellows are only marginally exposed to, I was unable to make this ACGME for many political reasons. The bottom line is that the person who takes this spot needs to know that they can't sit for the pain boards. I was approached by two fantastic private practice attendings (PMR and Ortho Spine), both on UCLA clinical staff. I could not pass this up due to the funding that came with the spot. I am always pushing for ACGME, but giving this opportunity for an excellent candidate was not right since so many applied to pain.
How did defphiche become a pain medicine forum moderator? He has 14 posts since 2005?!? I'm always VERY happy to see fellowship directors on this forum but one would think PARTICIPATION in the forum is required to become a moderator!
Dr. Fish:Ligament,
I fully agree with you on this. I was asked to be a moderator and said that I didn't have the time. I have no problem stepping down from the moderator position, but am unsure how to do this. Please forgive my lack of participation, I have other commitments that are taking up my time.
Ligament,
I fully agree with you on this. I was asked to be a moderator and said that I didn't have the time. I have no problem stepping down from the moderator position, but am unsure how to do this. Please forgive my lack of participation, I have other commitments that are taking up my time.
Dr. Fish:
Whether in the position of moderator or not, I for one appreciate the fact that you share your insights with the members of Pain Rounds.
It is people like you, Dr. Shah of Texa Tech, and Dr. Lobel, formerly of Emory, who bring credibility to this board.
Why does anyone care if Dr. Fish is a moderator or not - so long as, when the need arises, he is available to clarify what is going on at UCLA, or fellowships as a whole, I say thanks for stopping by whenever time permits.
Good lord.
Question for some of the attendings out here; are things (anesthesia v. PM&R, acred v. nonacred) this bad in private practice or is it just relegated to academia?
Good lord.
Question for some of the attendings out here; are things (anesthesia v. PM&R, acred v. nonacred) this bad in private practice or is it just relegated to academia?
Well, the backlash from this fellowship turned out to be more political than i thought. I will step down from this fellowship director position for the NON-ACGME spine fellowship.
I will have to agree that the NON-ACGME spine program compromised my ACGME position at WLA VA/UCLA pain program.
The opportunity position will still be available, but will not be called UCLA at this time.
The crux of the question is, "Who and what will set the standard of care for interventional pain medicine?"
The answer is far more complex than you might think...
We're all ears.
Could someone please define for me what constitutes an INSTITUTION? The plain language of the word would indicate that places like Harvard and UCLA would qualify as an institution, and thus only be able to maintain one fellowship, but in fact, both have more than that, and so clearly the word has a different meaning.Only one ACGME accredited Pain Medicine fellowship program will be approved per institution.
Could someone please define for me what constitutes an INSTITUTION? The plain language of the word would indicate that places like Harvard and UCLA would qualify as an institution, and thus only be able to maintain one fellowship, but in fact, both have more than that, and so clearly the word has a different meaning.
That being the case, I wonder why other "institutions" have not taken advantage of the same apparent loophole.