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Internal Medicine Residency Program Conferences
Intern
Morning Report:
This
weekly conference is a case conference held exclusively for Interns.
Here, the Chairman, Program Directors and Chief Residents lead
discussions geared to reviewing pathophysiology, the fundamentals
of physical diagnosis and the early skills of clinical decision
making.
Resident
Morning Report:
This
daily conference is a case conference held for all junior and
senior residents. Here, the Chairman, Program Directors, and Chief
Residents lead discussions focusing on advanced patient evaluation
skills and advanced clinical reasoning skills. The presentations
are scheduled to include cases from the inpatient wards, and the
ambulatory setting on a rotating basis.
Noon
Conference Series:
This
daily conference is developed as a programmed yearly curriculum,
focusing on the core concepts that have been selected by our curriculum
committee as the critical components of the discipline of Internal
Medicine.
Journal
Club:
This
bi-weekly conference is developed around a curriculum that emphasizes
the skills necessary to analyze and implement information conveyed
in the medical journals. Critical articles are selected to illustrate
core topics of Evidence Based Medicine, and faculty members with
special expertise in this area assist a resident in leading the
discussion of the article and its contents. Statisticians and
Epidemiologists review basic and advanced concepts at every session.
Clinical
Case Conference:
This
weekly conference is a special conference that was created by
our Chief Medical Residents to allow a select group of senior
residents who have distinguished themselves in their clinical
performance to discuss an unknown case. Here the resident acts
as as the case "discussant" to review the case and present
a differential diagnosis and discussion of the case. This year
we have discussed SARS, Stevens-Johnson Syndrome, Aplastic Anemia
due to formaldehyde and Mad-Cow Disease to name just a few. The
pathology seen at NJMS is impressive and exciting. (See below
table for more examples of our pathology)
Grand
Rounds:
This
weekly conference highlights a speaker with worldwide prominence
in his/her field. The guest speaker spends the day with residents,
precepts morning report, and teaches at bedside rounds. Speakers
the past year have included Drs. Barry Brenner and Gerald Appel
among many other world experts.
Bedside
Attending Rounds:
Daily
rounds are conducted with the entire team. The art of history
taking and physical examination is further refined and the challenges
of clinical management and patient outcomes are discussed.
Chairman's
Meeting:
Every
month the Chairman of Medicine, Dr. Jerry Ellner, meets with all
the residents to personally discuss how he can help improve the
residency program.
M&M Conference
This
conference is lead by the Program Director who discusses medical
mistakes, patient safety issues and deaths in a case based interactive
relaxed format.
Ethics Conference:
Monthly
conference teaches housestaff how to deal with ethical dilemmas
encompassing many issues including everything from dealing with
pharmaceutical companies to treating family members.
Career Workshop:
Residents
have the opportunity to discuss the private practice and fellowship
application and interview process with a panel of experts in a
3 hour career workshop with the Program Director and Associate
Program Directors as moderators. Learn everything from how to
write a perfect C.V. to what to say on the interview.
Teaching
Workshops:
The Program
Director, recognized as a "Master Educator" personally
teaches residents how to become creative and effective teachers
of students and interns.
Examples
of the unique pathology seen daily in the
NJMS
Internal Medicine Residency Training Program:
| Acute
Eosinophilic Pneumonia |
Leptospirosis |
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Amanita
Mushroom Induced Fulimant Hepatic Failure
|
Listeriosis |
|
Amebic
Liver Abscess
|
Lung
Abscess
|
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Atrial
Fibrillation in Wolf-Parkinson-White Syndrome
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Neuroleptic
Malignant Syndrome
|
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Autoimmune
Hemolytic Anemia
|
Neurosyphilis |
|
Babesiosis
|
Perivalvular
Abscess
|
| Bleomycin-Induced
Pulmonary Fibrosis |
Prolactinoma |
|
Coccidiomycosis
Osteomyelitis
|
Pseudomyxoma
Peritoneii |
|
Creutzfeldt-Jacob
Disease
|
Renal
Vein Thrombosis Complicating Lupus Nephritis |
|
Cystic
Fibrosis
|
Schirrhous
Hepatocellular Carcinoma |
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Disseminated
Gonococcal Infection
|
Schistosomiasis |
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Doxorubicin-Induced
Cardiac Toxicity
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Takayasu's
Arteritis
|
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Haemophilus
Influenzae Meningitis
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T-Cell
Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (presenting as facial plethora) |
|
Hemolytic
Uremic Syndrome/Thrombotic Thrombocytopenic Purpura
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Thyroid
Storm |
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Hereditary
Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia
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Toxic
Epidermal Necrolysis
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HIV
Cholangiopathy, Nephropathy
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Toxoplasmosis |
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Hyperthyroid
Myopathy
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Vancomycin-Induced
Neutropenia
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IV
Acyclovir Induced Renal Failure
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Von-Hippel-Landau
Syndrome
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