|
Mayo Clinic has a long-standing tradition of teaching both the art and science of medicine. As the country's largest and best-known academic group practice, Mayo Clinic was founded on the belief that the mutual interdependence of clinical medicine, clinical research, and medical education - the three Mayo shields - fosters the highest standard of medical care.
Physicians, scientists, residents, students, pharmacists, nurses, social workers and allied health staff collaborate to work as a team. Our physician faculty members are referred to as "consultants" in recognition of their role as teachers and mentors of residents and students.
Internal medicine residency training at Mayo offers:
- A comprehensive three-year curriculum that prepares residents for a clinical or academic career in general or subspecialty internal medicine
- A rotation schedule that emphasizes block ambulatory care experiences in primary care and specialty clinics. Full resident responsibility and autonomy for patient care
- An intensive didactic core curriculum that covers inpatient and outpatient practice
- A formal three-year curriculum in evidence-based medicine
- A comprehensive research curriculum that fosters scholarly inquiry leading to presentations at scientific meetings and peer-reviewed publications
- Extensive hands-on experience with all internal medicine procedures
- A formal curriculum in quality improvement projects
- A formal curriculum in health care systems and the costs of healthcare
- A variety of elective opportunities including rotations at Mayo Clinic Jacksonville, Florida and Mayo Clinic Scottsdale, Arizona
Residency education at Mayo is based on a foundation of general internal medicine. The program includes rotations in all internal medicine subspecialties, geriatrics, neurology, ambulatory care blocks, emergency medicine, intensive care units, and various electives in addition to general medicine experiences. Most rotations allocate separate blocks of time in the inpatient, outpatient and consultative settings. Each resident receives a comprehensive review text as well as access to Up To Date, MD Consult, Medline, and an extensive collection of electronic resources. Scheduling is flexible, and preferred rotations can be scheduled early in the second year to facilitate planning a subspecialty career.
While on inpatient services, residents will receive at least 20 hours of teaching each week. Excellence in medical education is a requirement of our faculty, who are selected for hospital service based on the effectiveness of their teaching. Faculty have dedicated, protected time to provide teaching to the residents they work with.
Rotations:
- General Internal Medicine
- Primary Care Internal Medicine & Geriatrics
- MICU
- Emergency Medicine
- Cardiology
- CCU
- Gastroenterology
- Hematology
- Infectious Diseases
- Nephrology
- Oncology
|
- Pulmonary
- Rheumatology
- Neurology
- Allergy
- Continuity Clinic
- Medical Consultation
- Breast Clinic and Women's Health
- Selective Rotations
- Elective Rotations
- Clinical Research
|
Rotation Schedule
Didactic Training
Over the three years of categorical residency, more than 800 didactic lectures are presented to internal medicine residents. The didactic portion of Mayo Clinic's Internal Medicine Residency Program includes:
- Core Curriculum Conferences
- Morbidity and Mortality Conferences
- Primary Care Conferences
- Grand Rounds
- Clinical Decision Making Journal Club
- Board Review
- Systems-based Practice and Quality Improvement Conferences
- Morning Report (Inpatient and Outpatient)
- Evidence-Based Medicine Didactic Conferences
A comprehensive, three-year didactic core curriculum addresses both inpatient and outpatient medicine. During the PG-1 year, the weekly core curriculum covers basic topics in internal medicine. These general core lectures are supplemented by a lecture series in each subspecialty service. Food is provided for residents, and conferences are telecast to multiple locations throughout the medical center so that residents can attend regardless of rotation or assignment.
In addition, more than 150 institutional clinical and research conferences are held each week.
Faculty will teach basic interviewing and physical examination skills to residents during the first year of residency using standardized patients and teaching videos. Residents will also learn in-depth clinical skills as part of each specialty curriculum. Workshops in procedural skills are provided during orientation and on specialty and ICU rotations.
During the second or third year, residents have the option to complete one general medicine rotation at Mayo Clinic Arizona in the role of a senior resident. This site provides an experience in community-based practice that complements the rotations in Rochester. During this assignment, Mayo subsidizes the costs of travel, housing, car rental and licensure. Residents consistently rate this rotation very highly.
Selective & Elective Time
Selective and Elective rotations vary among residents and are largely determined by career interests and individual requests.
- Additional consultative or clinic experience in internal medicine
- A choice from more than 100 electives inside and outside of internal medicine, including other Mayo practice sites
- Participation in a research project
- A third-world experience at one of many global locations, supported by a $2,000 "Mayo International Health Program" scholarship for travel
- HIV/AIDS experience at Maricopa Medical Center, Arizona (travel and housing reimbursement provided)
Evidence-Based Medicine
Mayo Clinic Rochester has taken an enthusiastic leadership role in teaching residents, fellows, and staff physicians the principles of evidence-based medicine: literature searching, critical appraisal, and evidence-based clinical decision-making. Through a three-year, multidisciplinary curriculum, residents learn these skills, enjoy many opportunities to apply them in clinical practice, and apply these skills in educational settings. The ability to find, appraise, and apply evidence in clinical practice is one of the central themes in our philosophy of medical education.
|