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View Table of Rotations

The Department of Family and Community Medicine has been at the forefront of innovation in medical education for years. Thanks to an active curriculum committee that meets monthly and reviews rotations, each year has seen reshaping and revision of the residency curriculum to take advantage of new opportunities, correct deficits, and meet the ever changing needs of residents. Past innovations have included a close mentoring relationship with individual faculty, longitudinal experiences in many disciplines, competency-based curriculum for certain rotations, the chance for an increased emphasis on OB, procedural skills, sports medicine, and geriatrics.

Resident training in our department is directed by the Family Medicine faculty. Rotations provide practice and education that is relevant to primary care, even if acquired in other specialty areas. Specific rotations have been carefully selected to meet the educational goals and objectives laid out by our department. Residents' evaluation of learning experiences are carefully monitored, and close contact is maintained between faculty representatives of our department and the other specialty departments in which the residents work.

The first year schedule is made up of two weeks of orientation, followed by 16 three-week block rotations and concludes with two additional weeks of orientation to the second year. The second and third-year schedules are comprised of 13 four-week blocks.

Residents begin their training with an initial orientation period to acquaint them with their new surroundings and colleagues. Included is a team building day. This is designed to lay the foundation for the study and practice of family medicine, as well as to give the resident a sense of his or her home territory before beginning rotations in other clinical departments. In the first year, five three-week blocks are spent at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center, the tertiary care hospital affiliated with the School of Medicine. Three blocks are spent at Forsyth Memorial Hospital, an 800-bed community hospital located a few miles away. Five blocks are spent in the Family Medicine Center, and four blocks are spent between all the clinical sites. Only five blocks, General Medicine, Specialty Medicine, Pediatrics and Obstetrics blocks assign in-house call averaging every fourth night. Family Medicine inpatient service and the Family Medicine Ambulatory month require call on average every six to eight nights. This call can be taken from home and is for admissions only. Adult and Pediatric Emergency Departments are covered with a mixture of daytime and nighttime shifts. Orientation and human behavior blocks have no night call. Two weeks of orientation come at the end of the first year and focus on the acquisition of knowledge and development of procedural skills consistent with new upcoming responsibilities that the residents assume in year two.

In the second year two blocks are spent in the Family Medicine department doing inpatient and outpatient work. Geriatrics and practice management are included in these outpatient rotations. One month is spent as the supervising resident on the Family Medicine in-patient service. Surgery is a one-on-one experience with community physicians in their offices at the community hospital. Ambulatory Pediatrics occurs in the community, while the Gynecology rotation is centered in the Family Medicine Center. Orthopedics is focused on outpatient skills and is coordinated by our own Sports Medicine Faculty.

Residents receive real-life exposure to rural medicine and community medicine during a rotation in a neighboring rural county at a Family Medicine Center. One block of elective time is available. During these rotations, residents take Family Medicine call which averages less than once a week and is taken from home in a fashion comparable to a typical private practice. The two blocks of critical care are spent at the Medical Center and involve call every fourth night, as part of a “cutting edge” team caring for acutely ill patients.

Much of the third year is spent with community physicians. Five blocks are elective and can be chosen from a wide array of rotations available through the School of Medicine and local community physicians, as well as distant and international sites. Specialty surgery rotations emphasize ambulatory care and involve learning in a variety of medical center and community locations

A gastroenterology rotation is balanced between exposure to common GI disease and acquiring GI procedural skills. Family Medicine responsibilities during this year include two blocks of outpatient and one and one half of inpatient work. All call is taken from home for the practice and will include backup practice call as well as primary call.

Full licensure is expected after the completion of the internship. As a result residents in both their second and third year may take advantage of the excellent moonlighting opportunities available in the area.

First Year

Second Year

Third Year

1 Block Orientation
(2 weeks at beginning
2 weeks at the end)

4 Blocks - Family Medicine Inpatient Service

1 Block – Behavioral Science

2 Blocks – Obstetrics

2 Blocks - Pediatrics (wards, nursery)

1 Block - General Medicine

1 Block – Specialty Medicine

3 Blocks - Ambulatory Medicine

2 Blocks - Emergency Department (adult, pediatric)

2 Blocks - Family Medicine Center (Outpatient clinics with additional focus on Geriatrics and Practice Management skills curriculum)

1 Block - Family Medicine Inpatient Service

1 Block - Community Family Medicine

1 Block - Medical Intensive Care Unit

1 Block - Coronary Care Unit

1 Block - Ambulatory General Pediatrics

1 Block – Ambulatory Specialty Pediatrics

1 Block – Gynecology

1 Block – Surgery

1 Block - Orthopaedics

1 Block - Rural Medicine

1 Block - Elective

1½  Blocks - Family Medicine Inpatient Service

2   Blocks - Family Medicine Center

1   Block – Gastroenterology

1   Block - Radiology/Urology

1   Block – Dermatology/
Procedures

1   Block - Ophthalmology/ Otolaryngology

1   Block – Surgery

4   Blocks – Elective

½  Sports Medicine

 

 

 

Copyright: Wake Forest University School of Medicine and North Carolina Baptist Hospitals. All rights reserved.

Medical Center Boulevard

Winston-Salem, NC 27157

The information on this Website is for general informational purposes only and SHOULD NOT be relied upon as a substitute for sound professional medical advice, evaluation or care from your physician or other qualified healthcare provider. If you have a medical problem or a health-related question, consult your physician or call Health On-Call at 336-716-2255 or 1-800-446-2255.

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Last Modified: 3/19/2008