Internal Medicine Residency Curriculum
The Internal Medicine Residency Curriculum is designed for residents to learn scientifically sound, effective and compassionate medical care for patients in all stages of life and during all stages of illness. When residents graduate from our program, they are fully prepared for a career in general Internal Medicine or to continue with sub-specialty fellowship training, as desired.
Internal Medicine Curriculum Goals
Our curriculum emphasizes evidence-based, cost-effective medicine in both the hospital and ambulatory settings. Residents have unique opportunities to work side-by-side with multiple sub-specialists during their rotations.
We’ve designed our program to ensure an appropriate balance between resident supervision and autonomy. When residents graduate from our program, they will understand how to diagnose, treat and manage acute episodic illnesses as well as chronic diseases in both inpatient and outpatient settings.
Below, we have outlined academic rotations by year.
Categorical Intern Rotations
Rotations include:
- Anesthesia — 0.5 Block
- Outpatient — 0.5 Block
- Emergency Department — 1 Block
- Geriatrics — 1 Block
- Intensive Care Unit/Night Float — 4 Blocks
- Internal Medicine Wards — 4 Blocks
- Neurology — 1 Block
- Endocrinology — 0.5 Block
- Outpatient Care — 0.5 Block
- Vacation — 1 Block
Preliminary Intern Rotations
Rotations include:
- Anesthesia — 0.5 Block
- Electives — 1 Block
- Emergency Department — 1 Block
- Intensive Care Unit/Night Float — 4 Blocks
- Internal Medicine Wards — 4. Blocks
- Neurology — 1 Block
- Outpatient Care — 0.5 Block
- Vacation — 1 Block
PGY-2 – PGY 3 Rotations
Rotations are templated across 2 years include:
- Clinic Weeks — 2 Blocks
- Subspecialty Electives — 7.5 Blocks
- Internal Medicine Wards — 6-7 Blocks
- Intensive Care Unit / Night Float — 6-7 Blocks
- Quality Improvement/Research — 0.5 Blocks
- Management of Health Systems — 0.5.Blocks
- Board Review — 1 Block
- Vacation — 2 Blocks
* Required Medicine Subspecialties: Cardiology, Endocrinology, Gastroenterology, Nephrology, Pulmonary Medicine
Conferences for Internal Medicine Residents
Our educational conferences are taught in a hybrid of in-person and virtual formats so all residents can participate. Conferences include:
- Subspecialty Noon Didactic Conferences
- Noon Resident Reports
- Journal Clubs
- Morbidity and Mortality
- Case Conferences
- Grand Rounds Conferences
Subspecialty Noon Conferences
We offer noon lectures that focus on subspecialty education following the American College of Physician Board Preparation curriculum. Topics may include:
- Cardiology
- Gastroenterology
- Endocrinology
- Critical Care
- General Internal Medicine
- Hematology Oncology
- Nephrology
- Rheumatology
- Geriatrics
Wednesday Noon Conference
Each Wednesday, the noon conference is reserved for:
- Hospital-based Grand Rounds
- In-service Training
- Scholarly Activity
- Wellness Activities
Apply to the Internal Medicine Residency Program
Are you interested in joining our Internal Medicine Residency? Find out how toapply.