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Rotations at PPMC

Our curriculum is fine-tuned with ongoing resident involvement, allowing residents to develop top quality skills in both inpatient and outpatient settings. Residents are simultaneously challenged and supported – creating a vibrant learning environment. See below for descriptions of each of our rotations.

Inpatient Medicine Teaching Service

  • Progressive Responsibility
    • Unique team structures linked to resident development
    • Step-wise increase in patient census as PGY-2
  • Diversity of patients
    • Varied demographics
    • Wide range of diseases
  • Emphasis on autonomy
  • Attendings are medical education faculty or hospitalist clinician-educators
  • Interactive teaching conferences
    • Dynamic conference series
  • Night float system
    • No shifts longer than 16 hours at any PGY level
  • Superb ancillary support services

First Year House Officers

Duration: 16-18 weeks

Varying Team Structures

  • Interns work with upper-level residents in two different team structures: First-year residents may either be paired alone with an upper-level resident or be part of a two-intern, one resident team. One of the senior house staff is from Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU) and represents part of our formal affiliation with its medical school.
  • Teams usually have either a third-year medical student or a fourth-year sub-intern for each wards team.
  • Maximum patient census for interns varies from 7-10 patients depending B or C team structure.
  • Interns on the inpatient teams admit every other day. There is night float coverage every night.
  • Teaching service teams are closed to admissions when a team accrues a predetermined number of patients.
  • The 24/7 availability of personnel doing IV catheters, EKGs, arterial blood gases, blood drawings and transport markedly enhances the resident's ability to manage teaching service patients efficiently.
  • In addition to daily teaching during work rounds, the dynamic and interactive noon-conference series occurs daily.

Teaching services

  • Designed to ensure that residents are responsible for patient management.
  • For the patients on teaching service, physicians agree that only house staff will write orders on those patients.
  • Patients on the teaching services have either a full-time hospitalist clinician-educator or a core medical education faculty as their attending.
  • Each teaching service also admits patients from our own faculty resident practice. Whenever possible, residents follow their patients as the primary physician.
  • A full-time faculty member supervises all hospitalized patients.

Second and Third Year Residents

Duration: 18 weeks. The call schedule for residents on the wards is identical to that described for interns. Residents have no call shifts longer than 16 hours.

Team Structures

  • Second-year residents in the beginning of the year start on a team with no intern and are paired 1:1 with a hospitalist whose focus is to provide meaningful observations and feedback to the resident.
  • This unique structure allows the new second-year resident to gain comfort with expanded responsibilities while intensely focusing on the continued development of excellent clinical skills and efficiency prior to assuming the added responsibility of managing teams with interns and medical students later in the fall of their second year.
  • Becoming an R2: prior to the start of PGY2 year, housestaff participate in a formal seminar series that focuses on the management and education skills needed to optimally run a teaching service.
  • Second-year residents then move on to lead single-intern teams on work rounds, coordinate patient care and teach both interns and students during wards rotations.

Night Float

Duration: Average 4 weeks for all PGYs

  • Monday through Friday night the night float team (one resident and one intern) evaluates medicine admissions coming to the hospital.
  • The team cross-covers teaching service patients, between 7:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m.
  • A float resident covers Saturday and Sunday nights for cross-covers and admissions.

Intensive Care Unit

Duration: 6 weeks for all PGYs

  • A combined medical-surgical ICU with 24/7 on-site support from board-certified critical care physicians.
  • The ICU allows our residents to gain tremendous experience in the assessment and management of critically ill medical and post-operative patients.
  • The high census, high acuity setting creates a vibrant learning environment.
  • With no fellows in the ICU, our residents have extensive opportunities to perform procedures such as central lines and intubations under the supervision of our critical care physicians.
  • Daily, multidisciplinary rounds with a board-certified critical care physician allow house staff to learn both the latest in ICU management techniques and how to lead a multidisciplinary team.
  • Two-hour daily rounds provide a strong foundation to house staff rotating in the ICU. Educational experiences in the ICU include:
    • X-ray rounds, daily
    • ICU didactics, daily
    • Infectious disease rounds, daily
    • Ethics rounds, weekly

Team Structure

  • Two interns and a third-year resident staff the unit each day.
  • Second year residents assigned to the ICU cover the unit five nights each week. A float resident covers the other nights.

Procedures Rotation

Duration: 2 weeks for PGY1

  • This experience is designed to give interns comfort and competence in a broad range of procedures.
  • High-volume, hands-on learning allows rapid acquisition of technical skills such as intubation, central lines and paracentesis.
  • Point-of-care ultrasound training is incorporated.

Team Structure

  • Working one-on-one with interventional radiologists, anesthesiologists, and experienced nurses creates mentored experiences to learn best techniques.

Subspecialty Rotations and Electives

Duration: Average of 16 weeks for all PGYs

  • Full range of medical and surgical electives available
  • 1:1 with subspecialty faculty
    • Personalized teaching
    • Opportunity for procedures
  • Most rotations combine inpatient and outpatient experiences

We encourage house staff to tailor elective choices to meet their personal goals. The proportion of inpatient versus outpatient can be adjusted. Every month of residency training is precious. We want to maximize every elective’s value to every resident. The associate program director works directly with each resident to maximize elective education.

Geriatrics

Duration: 2 weeks is an ACGME program requirement and scheduled during R2 year

During the rotation:

  • Residents spend time in a variety of settings on their geriatrics rotation, including Providence Elderplace, home visits, geriatric psychiatry, and specialized Geriatric Assessment and Falls Assessment clinics.
  • Didactic teaching focuses on the 4 Ms of geriatrics: What Matters, Medication, Mentation, and Mobility.
  • Additional time is spent in inpatient rehab at Providence Portland with a physiatrist and the therapy team; the resident is exposed to the hands-on assessment by PT and OT.
  • The resident will also go to Providence Elderplace, a unique care model for frail elderly.
  • During the rotation, the resident will also do some home hospice visits with a nurse and a social worker.
  • Work with a unique care model of PMG at Home seeing patients in clinic.
  • Home visits with faculty on primary care patients.

Primary Care Elective

Residents on the primary care elective spend time with primary care physicians in a variety of settings. They gain exposure to individual physician practices, midsize physician-owned practices, and large multi-location practices. Residents interested in primary care learn what types of settings work best for their practice style, and often gain exposure to clinics where they may work in the future.

Hospitalist Elective

This is a 2-week hospitalist elective for third year residents interested in hospital medicine which allows them to gain unique experiences to prepare them for work as a hospitalist. Residents carry a full hospitalist team for 1-2 weeks under the direct supervision and support of a full-time hospitalist. They have the opportunity to experience triage and cross-cover for a large hospitalist group. Finally, each resident has an opportunity to participate in hospital wide meetings and get didactics on topics like inpatient billing and coding.