Internal Medicine
General Information
Beth Israel
Program Leadership
Training Programs
House Staff Input
Chief Medical Residents
Mentoring
Department of Medicine
Research
Clinical Initiatives
House Staff
Schedule
New York City
Recent Alumni/Fellowships
Educational Activities

Regularly Scheduled Educational Activities

Dr. Anna Kochin, PGY-3 on work rounds

Dr.Kochin resident with fellow interns and medical
student during morning roundsPatient Rounds

Residents start the day by leading bedside teaching and work rounds with the team. Team members review the progress of each patient, incorporating patient management with opportunities for informal medical discussion
.

 

  

  
                                                                                                                                               Dr. Jonathan Raskin, pulmonary attending in teaching rounds with his residents and student

Attending rounds in 3Dazian
Attending Rounds


Medical teams present and discuss patients during rounds with their teaching attendings. Case management is discussed within the context of pathophysiology and patient care, incorporating new developments.




 

Chairman’s Rounds

The Chairman rounds with one of the ward teams each week. House staff have the opportunity to present and discuss patients and philosophy with their Chief of Medicine.                                                                          

  
Residents’ Morning Report

In a dynamic, interactive forum, house staff meet with the chief medical residents, Dr. Fleckman, Dr. Cortes, Dr. Steinberg and select faculty to discuss interesting and instructive cases. Residents present patients, concentrating on the most challenging aspects, and chief medical residents incorporate the latest medical literature.   


Dr. Georges Ephrem, PGY-3 will be a Chief Resident here 2011-12

Resident Case Presentation and Literature Review: Residents are mentored by a senior faculty member to present and discuss one case in depth, with emphasis on differential diagnosis, clinical problem solving and expert subspecialty discussion. The format of these conferences encourages their presentation at national conferences in abstract form.

Primary Care Conference: One conference per week for all residents is dedicated to the primary care curriculum. Outside speakers from many disciplines discuss topics that are important for the delivery of care to patients in the ambulatory setting in addition to presentations by the general medical and subspecialty medicine faculty.  Residents attend additional primary care conferences at the general medical clinic during their ambulatory block rotations    

       






House staff in our noon conference lecture room 

Residents at noon conferenceNoon Conference

Following the core curriculum lecture series on managing acute medical problems given each July and August, daily noon conferences are the forum for review of major topics in the curriculum, recent advancements, discussions of ethics, morbidity and mortality, and the weekly ambulatory medicine series.

  







Former Chief Resident Jyoti Sharma, now a
Cardiology Fellow at University of Texas, Houston
teaching interns' core

Chief Medical Resident Dr.Sharma before the start of
Intern's coreInterns' Core Curriculum

Using the Socratic method, the chief medical residents meet with the interns twice-weekly to discuss physiology, pathophysiology and treatment in a relaxed environment. Major areas of internal medicine are covered in this year-long curriculum.

  



 
 

Residents' Research Grand Rounds

Conferences are presented by the medical residents to the residents and senior faculty, constituting a research seminar by residents performing clinical or bench research or a comprehensive scholarly review including basic science background and future directions of a select research topic in clinical medicine that focuses on a major article.

  

Residents' Board Review

Residents meet weekly throughout the year with the chief medical residents and/or faculty for an in-depth review of internal medicine topics with the goal of guiding study and maximizing preparation for the American Board of Internal Medicine certification examination.   



Dr. Yuichi Shimada, PGY-3 teaching EBM

Dr.Shimada presenting at the Evidence Based Medicine
conferenceEvidence Based Medicine Journal Club

During the PGY-2 year, residents select, present and analyze controversial and important journal articles from the recent literature in an informal presentation to their house staff colleagues. Direct one-on-one mentoring and preparation is given to each resident by a Chief Medical Resident. Although a Chief and a Program Director are always present, residents are encouraged to be presenter-teachers and are taught evidence-based concepts with an eye to giving them the ability to pass this knowledge on to others, in addition to using it in their own practice.

   
   

To view an example of one of our resident's EBM presentations, click here

  

Clinicopathologic Conference (CPC)

As frequent as
each month, residents present current cases of extraordinary interest, with outstanding CPC-style discussion by attendings from medicine, pathology and radiology.

  
Grand rounds are held in Podel auditorium

Grand Rounds

Each week, Beth Israel faculty and invited speakers discuss or lecture on topics of major interest, cases from the Beth Israel service or current advances in the field.  

Basic and Clinical Research Lecture Series: In the summer full time faculty present basic science background and principles of informed consent, rights of research subjects and fundamentals of clinical research. The divisions of the Department of Medicine present active areas of investigation in each of their fields and explain how house staff can get involved in a wide variety of research projects. This series is reinforced throughout the year with talks by invited speakers and with activities designed by the resident-faculty Research Committee including "Research Fairs" and poster presentations.

  

Subspecialty Conferences

In addition to the above conferences specifically given for the residents, each division holds weekly subspecialty conferences, frequently including prestigious outside speakers.

                                                                                                                       Dr.Nancy Allen, PGY2 training in the Simulation Room

Dr.Nancy Allen, PGY2 during Rapid Response Team
training in the Simulation RoomComputerized Simulation Training


Using a computerized patient simulator, house staff receive instruction in emergency airway management as well as code leader, code team and rapid response team training. 

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