Would you mind sharing your questions and their respective answers?
No problem. The questions mainly pertained to what types of transplants we do as well as the trauma, cardiac, and peds experiences. My response is below...
We do kidney, liver, and heart transplants at VCU. (The VA medical center in Richmond also does heart transplants, and we spend some time there.) We also do several ICU months. As interns, we rotate through the neurosurgery ICU, the burn ICU, and the MICU (which is done at the VA). As CA-1s, we rotate through the STICU. As CA-2s, we rotate through the cardiac surgery ICU and neurosurgery ICU. And as CA-3s, we go back to the cardiac surgery ICU. (Each of those are for one month.)
We do get a good amount of traumas including motor vehicle accidents, GSWs, burns, and everything in between. We have dedicated trauma months every year (except intern year).
For pediatrics, we get experience in everything from the bread and butter ambulatory peds surgeries all the way to pediatric heart surgeries. We do two-three months of dedicated pediatric anesthesia, and then we pick up cases on trauma rotations and when we are in the ambulatory surgery center as CA-3s.
For cardiac, we have a busy cardiac surgery service. As residents, we are the primary provider in the room. Our cardiac anesthesia fellows act as a junior attending for the cases, so you are in charge of running the cases and doing all the procedures. We do heart transplants, LVADs, CABGs, all valves, TAVRs, ECMO, and total artificial hearts. And our patient population is rather sick (most are people who were turned down for surgery with private practice surgeons and show up at VCU). Overall, you get very comfortable with the entire variety of cardiac surgeries and the associated procedures. Many of our residents go out into private practice and will do hearts without having done a fellowship.