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  The first year of the Family Medicine Residency
Program focuses on inpatient care
and introducing
residents to the concept of a Patient-centered Medical Home.
The inpatient component consists of experiences in family
medicine, cardiology, gastroenterology, pediatrics, obstetrics,
emergency medicine, and intensive care medicine.

The Patient-Centered Medical Home (PCMH) is taught in our Family Medicine
Center/Longitudinal curriculum. First year residents spend one month in
the Family Medicine Center as an introduction to the PCMH in addition to their half-day
per week in the Family Medicine Center that occurs throughout the first year. The month takes place during the first half of the academic year to help orient residents to the PCMH early in their residency training. During this rotation, residents have the opportunity to work closely with faculty and senior residents in the office. One-to-one precepting sessions with faculty allow for personalized teaching and time to become comfortable with our electronic medical record. Residents also work with our Behavioral Scientist on interviewing skills during this time. Sessions are devoted to evidence based medicine, performance improvement, disease management, practice management, radiology and laboratory skills, and Community Medicine. Time is also available to start independent work on computer based courses as well as on long range research, practice management, and community medicine projects.

The inpatient rotations consist of two months on the Family Medicine Service, one month of pediatrics, two months of obstetrics, and one month each of cardiology (CCU), gastroenterology, surgery and emergency medicine. On the Family Medicine Service, residents care for patients admitted from our Family Medicine Center, including general medicine, pediatrics, gynecology and intensive care unit patients. This rotation stresses the diagnosis and treatment of common medical problems using a team approach, with a senior resident and Family Medicine faculty following the patient through all degrees of illness. During the Cardiology/CCU rotation, residents learn how to care for common cardiology illnesses such as congestive heart failure and coronary artery disease and follow critical care unit patients with the private cardiologists and perform procedures related to these patients. With the gastroenterologists, residents are able to learn GI procedures including flexible sigmoidoscopy. In emergency medicine, residents work with full-time attendings to learn how to assess and stabilize acutely ill patients.

The pediatric experience occurs on the pediatrics floor at JFK. The resident spends four weeks working with the Pediatric faculty including pediatric intensivists. The residents care for pediatric patients and learn the fundamentals of inpatient pediatric care through a combination of bedside teaching and didactics. The family medicine resident admits and carries a caseload of patients with pediatric attendings, participates in daily rounds and attends conferences.

Obstetrics training consists of two four-week blocks at JFK. The residents care for our Family Medicine Center obstetrical patients�managing prenatal care, labor and delivery, post-partum care and follow-up. The residents are supervised by both Family Medicine faculty and attendings in the Family Medicine obstetrical group, who provide 24-hour coverage as well as didactic lectures to the obstetrics resident.

The surgical rotation consists of four weeks under the assignment of JFK general surgery attending physicians. The residents evaluate and diagnose surgical patients, assist the surgeon intra-operatively and post-operatively, and learn appropriate surgical referral.

 

JFK Health System