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Clinical Pathology Residency Training Program


Program Outline | Core Program: First Year | Core Program: Second Year

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PROGRAM OUTLINE

Overview
Resident education in Clinical Pathology is provided by the Department of Laboratory Medicine, consisting of 24 full time faculty members, 7-9 residents and 3 fellows. Departmental laboratories include the Blood Bank, Clinical Chemistry, Hematology, Immunology, Microbiology, Virology, Molecular Diagnostics, Apheresis and Stem Cell Processing, And Computer and Instrumentation Services. These are the primary laboratories for Yale-New Haven Medical Center, the Yale Faculty Practice Plan, and the Yale Medical Group. They also serve as a core facility for Yale University clinical research centers and as reference laboratories for the State of Connecticut and southern New England. More than 5 million tests are performed yearly. The laboratories are housed in a facility covering 43,000 square feet. They are centrally located in the Yale-New Haven Medical Center on the 3rd, 4th , 5th and 6th floors of the Clinic Building and are three blocks from the main campus of Yale University and downtown New Haven. The Department also includes the clinical laboratories at the VA Connecticut Healthcare System (an extensive clinical and research campus located 15 minutes away by shuttle bus), as well as the VA national mycobacteriology and virology reference laboratories.

In addition to providing laboratory services for the Medical Center, the Department has a strong research program emphasizing immunohematology in general and with specific strengths in molecular immunology and virology, transplantation immunology, molecular diagnostics, hemostasis, hematopoiesis, and clinical pharmacology, as well as other areas described under Faculty Research Interests. The research laboratories are located in close proximity to the clinical laboratories, facilitating ready interaction and transfer of biotechnology. The Department is responsible for teaching two major courses to 1st and 2nd year medical students, "Microbiology" and "Introduction to Laboratory Medicine", and for 3rd year student teaching in Laboratory Medicine within the Medicine clerkships.

Programs are available for residents in the combined Anatomic Pathology (AP)/Clinical Pathology (CP) Program, as well as for residents in either straight CP or straight AP. An 18-month core curriculum in CP is offered to all residents to assure familiarity with all aspects of Laboratory Medicine while allowing flexibility for subspecialization and tailoring of the CP electives program to the individual interests of each resident. Residents in the straight CP program require a total of 36 months of training. Research and clinical subspecialty opportunities are available to allow completion of the 3rd year of the CP track, as well as for residents in the AP/CP program who wish to pursue additional training in Laboratory Medicine. Research may be pursued not only within the Department, but also with mentors in basic science or clinical departments in the School of Medicine, School of Public Health, and Yale University. While CP residents who are aiming for an academic research career are encouraged to apply for external support for research fellowships (such as K awards), salary is guaranteed for the full training period required for board eligibility in Clinical Pathology.

Educational Goals And Philosophy
Our program is designed to provide residents with a good foundation of knowledge in all aspects of Clinical Pathology and an in-depth experience in one of the subspecialties that particularly interests them. To accomplish this residents rotate through each of the sections of the Clinical Laboratories during their first year. During the second and subsequent years they are encouraged to concentrate their activities in one of the subspecialties. Integration of the various subspecialties is achieved through various interdisciplinary teaching and clinical conferences in the Department, through on-call responsibilities and during the rotation at the VA Connecticut Healthcare System. The department includes faculty with strong clinical backgrounds and interests, as well as research faculty with interests in molecular biology and information science and their applications to laboratory medicine (see Faculty Research Interests). Residents thus have the opportunity for exposure to all aspects of clinical testing from conceptualization in basic research to practical realization in the clinical laboratory and application to patient care.

Emphasis is placed upon understanding the basic science and associated biotechnology of Clinical Pathology, becoming familiar and comfortable with modern instrumentation and computers, and upon the interpretation and clinical utilization of laboratory tests. To accomplish this residents work on research and/or developmental projects in the laboratories and serve as consultants to the hospital physicians on the use and interpretation of laboratory data. Upon completion of the program, residents should be prepared for careers in either academic or community medicine.

On-call Responsibilities
Residents have certain general responsibilities throughout each residency year. The most important of these is taking call, which is rotated among all residents, generally once every 7-9 nights and weekends. The resident on call is responsible for emergency consultations and problem-solving for all of the labs at Yale and the Veterans Hospital from 5 PM to 8 AM on weekdays and from 5 PM on Friday to 8 AM on Monday during weekends. This usually entails staying in the laboratories until 6-7PM on weekdays or from about 9-10 AM to 3-4 PM on weekends, after which call may be taken from home. Most problems are handled by telephone and it is rarely necessary to return to the hospital. Backup is available at all times from the Chief Resident and the laboratory medical directors. On-call and regular hour work rules are approved by and in compliance with OSHA, ACGME, and the Yale GME guidelines.

Lectures and Conferences
The current schedule for conferences and courses listed below can be found at http://calendar.yahoo.com/yalelabmed.

In addition to daily interaction with the faculty during laboratory rotations, teaching is accomplished through required lectures and conferences. An intensive course of "survival" lectures is given during the one week orientation for the new residents. Formal lectures thereafter are designed to cover all aspects of Laboratory Medicine. There are a number of weekly conferences: Morning report (Mondays 9-10AM) is a presentation and discussion of the most challenging on call cases encountered during the preceding week. Clinical Case Conference (Fridays 8:30-9:30AM) is a formal presentation by the residents of a case chosen to highlight the use of laboratory data in patient diagnosis and management. This conference is presented by the residents with assistance by the faculty and is often attended by clinicians involved in the patient's care. One case conference per month is designated as an AP/CP Case Conference and is jointly presented by the responsible Clinical Pathology and Anatomic Pathology residents. Case Conferences are occasionally posted on the department website if they have extra teaching value. Residents also present "hot" papers at monthly Journal Club, in the context of a critical analysis of the paper. Didactic Conference is presented biweekly (Tuesdays and Thursdays 8:30-9:30AM) by the laboratory medicine and associated faculty; this conference is the major relevant teaching to prepare residents for their Pathology Board examinations. Residents also meet informally for Brown-bag conferences on Unknowns and for Special Subjects, often presented by junior faculty members. In the biweekly Research Seminar, state-of-the-art topics and research-in-progress are presented by more senior departmental faculty, other faculty in the School of Medicine or Yale University, and invited speakers from other institutions. Senior laboratory medicine residents may also present the results of their clinical or research investigations at Research Seminar. Weekly Hematopathology conferences are presented jointly by the residents and the hemepath fellow with additional clinical input from the hematology and oncology fellows and both pathology and cytogenetics faculty. The weekly Coagulation Conference is presented by the resident in the Hematology laboratory, again with input from the clinical hematology fellows. Residents also attend the Yale-New Haven Medical Center house staff lecture series which covers topics of broad interest to all house staff and includes lectures on ethical, legal, economic and social issues in medical care. There are also innumerable conferences presented by other School of Medicine and University departments which residents may selectively attend, as clinical responsibilities permit.

Advanced Training in Clinical Pathology
Opportunities are available during the 3rd CP year for additional subspecialty and/or research training. The format for this advanced training is individualized for each resident to assure both relevance to career goals and adherence to the requirements for residency training of the American Board of Pathology. Subspecialty training is handled by giving the residents more senior, graduated responsibilities under the direction of the attending physician. Some residents elect to participate in clinical fellowships in clinical pathology at this stage of their training, while others begin more basic research endeavors within the Laboratory Medicine Department or in the broader School of Medicine or University. Projects may be in practical areas, such as methods development or outcomes, or they may be in an area of more basic research; however, all work is carried out under the auspices of that particular clinical pathology laboratory (see Faculty Research Interests). Projects may be physically located in one of the clinical laboratories or a basic research laboratory under the direct supervision of a faculty member outside of Laboratory Medicine. The broad range of potential research opportunities can be explored in the Yale University medical faculty research database. Prior to undertaking any project, the resident prepares a short proposal in NIH format with the assistance of the faculty mentor. This proposal is reviewed and approved by a 3-member faculty committee prior to the project's initiation.

Benefits
Yale-New Haven Hospital provides a uniform set of benefits for all House Staff, including malpractice, health and disability insurance which are competitive with other Northeast U.S. programs. In addition to general house staff benefits, the Department provides each resident with a $500 yearly book allowance and will fund attendance at one professional meeting annually in the 2nd or 3rd years (not to exceed $1000). Attendance at a meeting during the 1st year is funded only if research is to be presented. Three weeks of annual vacation are provided, with an additional 1 week available for meeting attendance .

Applying to the Program
Residents must have a Doctor of Medicine degree from an approved U.S. or Canadian medical school or must hold a currently valid ECFMG certificate if they are physicians with M.D. degrees from other medical schools. All applications to the program must be made via the ERAS program administered by the NRMP. Applicants are encouraged to contact the program director (Dr. Henry Rinder) beforehand to discuss their career plans and to explore how Yale can help them accomplish their goals. You may contact the Clinical Pathology training director as follows:

Clinical Pathology Training Director
Department of Laboratory Medicine
Yale University School of Medicine
PO Box 208035
333 Cedar Street
New Haven, CT 06520-8035
E-mail: CPResidency

Core Program: First Year

Core Program: Second Year


 

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Page last revised: April 30, 2007