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- Aug 6, 2014
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Why you should seriously consider UT Southwestern Family Medicine:
Yes, I’m a little biased…I’m one of the chief residents this year! But I have to say, I really love this program. If I could turn back time and do it all over again, I would still come here. The residency clinic is joined with Parkland Hospital, the region’s enormous county hospital which serves a largely uninsured and immigrant population. Learning also takes place at UTSW’s two academic hospitals as well as numerous community/private clinics and hospitals (not to mention a half-dozen community partners like homeless and DV shelters). This variety provides the quintessential learning environment for trainees: truly sick patients with very diverse backgrounds and rare pathology, along with plenty of nuts-and-bolts inpatient and clinic cases. You see how access-to-care and insurance affects morbidity. You can try out different practice settings, each with its pros and cons, before applying for your first job. To ice the cake, we just added a new inpatient service, so we do inpatient at Parkland and UTSW St. Paul Hospital…and both are building brand new hospitals as we speak!
Our faculty knows how wide the scope of family medicine is, so they encourage each of us to find our clinical focus and use our research projects and (4+) months of elective time to hone the skills WE need to become the physicians WE want to be. Since I’ve been here, residents have gone on to sports medicine fellowships, geriatric fellowships, hospitalist positions, faculty positions, urgent care, locums positions, community group practices… some even started their own outpatient practices from scratch. We are highly sought after in the Texas job market, and beyond. I am signed off on almost all my inpatient procedures (paras, LPs, arthrocenteses, central lines) and outpatient procedures (biopsies, IUDs, EMBs, cryotherapy, lacs, joint injections). Still need a few more thoras though. Opportunity and supervision is definitely not a problem!
Yes, we are expected to see up to 10 patients a half-day in clinic as 3rd years, but that’s the real world we have to practice in. On my job hunt, most places expect physicians to see 20-25 patients a day. Our graduates say they are very comfortable with time management. Additionally, ACGME requires residents have 1650 clinic visits to graduate, but that is rarely a problem for our graduates. And plenty of pediatrics/newborns too (inpatient, outpatient, ped ER, and nursery). If you are thinking about urgent care or EM, Parkland is one of the busiest ERs in the country with a prestigious EM program and outstanding EM faculty. You can do the minimum 2 months, but they are more than happy when our residents choose ER electives (one current resident is doing 6 total months of ER).
We are represented at several national FM conferences each year with resident posters and oral presentations (STFM, TAFP, NAPCRG). We have robust clinical research support both within the residency and other programs (Sports Medicine, geriatrics, endocrinology to name a few). Most residents do more than the bare minimum to meet the research requirement- the program actually makes research accessible, efficient, and even fun!
I will admit to some weaknesses…the OB program needs work, but it is NOT because of lack of deliveries! What has worked well for years is that we work with midwifes doing low-risk deliveries, so we don’t have to deal with the often-malignant and very over-worked OB residency. The midwives love to teach and you are never shadowing! We just hired 2 new OB faculty to make prenatal visits and fam med OB a routine part of our residency, not just a required rotation.
Our feeder medical school, UTSW, is notorious for breeding specialists, but more and more each year are choosing primary care and our program in particular. We have started creating strong ties with the Family Medicine Interest Group on campus to spread the good word of family medicine.
I am very satisfied with my training, and am glad I chose a program that allowed me to also balance work with family life, so I’m not burned out before I even start my first real job.
Yes, I’m a little biased…I’m one of the chief residents this year! But I have to say, I really love this program. If I could turn back time and do it all over again, I would still come here. The residency clinic is joined with Parkland Hospital, the region’s enormous county hospital which serves a largely uninsured and immigrant population. Learning also takes place at UTSW’s two academic hospitals as well as numerous community/private clinics and hospitals (not to mention a half-dozen community partners like homeless and DV shelters). This variety provides the quintessential learning environment for trainees: truly sick patients with very diverse backgrounds and rare pathology, along with plenty of nuts-and-bolts inpatient and clinic cases. You see how access-to-care and insurance affects morbidity. You can try out different practice settings, each with its pros and cons, before applying for your first job. To ice the cake, we just added a new inpatient service, so we do inpatient at Parkland and UTSW St. Paul Hospital…and both are building brand new hospitals as we speak!
Our faculty knows how wide the scope of family medicine is, so they encourage each of us to find our clinical focus and use our research projects and (4+) months of elective time to hone the skills WE need to become the physicians WE want to be. Since I’ve been here, residents have gone on to sports medicine fellowships, geriatric fellowships, hospitalist positions, faculty positions, urgent care, locums positions, community group practices… some even started their own outpatient practices from scratch. We are highly sought after in the Texas job market, and beyond. I am signed off on almost all my inpatient procedures (paras, LPs, arthrocenteses, central lines) and outpatient procedures (biopsies, IUDs, EMBs, cryotherapy, lacs, joint injections). Still need a few more thoras though. Opportunity and supervision is definitely not a problem!
Yes, we are expected to see up to 10 patients a half-day in clinic as 3rd years, but that’s the real world we have to practice in. On my job hunt, most places expect physicians to see 20-25 patients a day. Our graduates say they are very comfortable with time management. Additionally, ACGME requires residents have 1650 clinic visits to graduate, but that is rarely a problem for our graduates. And plenty of pediatrics/newborns too (inpatient, outpatient, ped ER, and nursery). If you are thinking about urgent care or EM, Parkland is one of the busiest ERs in the country with a prestigious EM program and outstanding EM faculty. You can do the minimum 2 months, but they are more than happy when our residents choose ER electives (one current resident is doing 6 total months of ER).
We are represented at several national FM conferences each year with resident posters and oral presentations (STFM, TAFP, NAPCRG). We have robust clinical research support both within the residency and other programs (Sports Medicine, geriatrics, endocrinology to name a few). Most residents do more than the bare minimum to meet the research requirement- the program actually makes research accessible, efficient, and even fun!
I will admit to some weaknesses…the OB program needs work, but it is NOT because of lack of deliveries! What has worked well for years is that we work with midwifes doing low-risk deliveries, so we don’t have to deal with the often-malignant and very over-worked OB residency. The midwives love to teach and you are never shadowing! We just hired 2 new OB faculty to make prenatal visits and fam med OB a routine part of our residency, not just a required rotation.
Our feeder medical school, UTSW, is notorious for breeding specialists, but more and more each year are choosing primary care and our program in particular. We have started creating strong ties with the Family Medicine Interest Group on campus to spread the good word of family medicine.
I am very satisfied with my training, and am glad I chose a program that allowed me to also balance work with family life, so I’m not burned out before I even start my first real job.