Schedules
The academic schedules within the Rheumatology Fellowship are designed to ensure fellows complete all their academic requirements and clinical training experiences without overloading or overwhelming their day-to-day routines. We encourage you to learn more about the inpatient and outpatient experiences in our Rheumatology schedules, as well as elective opportunities, we offer to our fellows below.
Inpatient Rheumatology Experience
Each fellow will be responsible for the Consult Service for a total of 23 weeks during their two years of fellowship training and will personally see approximately 300 patients. On average, the fellow will have direct patient care responsibility for two cases and serve as a consultant on eight at any given time. The consult service covers three hospitals settings that serve diverse patient population needs:
- SUNY Upstate Medical University
- Crouse Irving Memorial Hospital
- Veterans Administration Hospital
The fellow responsible for running the Consult Service will distribute patients to any rotating Medicine residents and medical students. All initial patient consults must be seen by the fellow on-service and/or reported directly to the fellow by the resident or medical students before they are discussed with the attending.
Under the supervision of the Consult Attending, the fellow will develop and refine their clinical evaluation skills of patients with rheumatic diseases, including appropriate differential diagnosis, diagnostic evaluation, treatment, and the need for continued hospitalization. Their exposure to the inpatient service will hone their understanding of indications and contraindications, techniques and possible complications of arthrocentesis and interpretation of results. Fellows will acquire skills in performing synovial fluid crystal analysis by polarized light microscopy as well as other non-invasive and invasive procedures.
Consult consists of formal rounding three times a week (Mon., Wed., and Friday). Rounds on Tuesday and Thursday are dependent based off the attending preference and the patient’s needs.
The on call schedule is generally divided on a weekly basis between the four fellows. Call hours are adjusted accordingly to comply with ACGME Duty Hour requirements. Fellows cover Monday through Sunday. Fellows who are not on call on Saturdays and Sundays, are entirely free from hospital duties. Instead, call is taken from home via beepers and telephone.
While on in-patient consult service, fellows are excused from all their clinic duties except for their continuity clinic.
A fellow will be assigned as back-up consult to the primary consult fellow during the consult week from Monday to Friday. The main responsibilities of the back-up consult are to cover the primary fellow on consult during their assigned continuity clinic. The start and stop time for the back-up will be from 11:30 pm-5:00 pm. The backup consult will be available for assistance when there is no back-up resident and a need for at least one new consult. Each fellow will be assigned another fellow to be their back-up consult throughout the academic year.
Outpatient Rheumatology Experience
Fellows are assigned to three half-day ambulatory clinics per week. During the course of their two-year fellowship, they will see an average of one and a half new and five follow-up patients per session, leading to a total of more than 600 new and 2,000 follow-up patients during their two-year training. Continuity of follow-up with the same fellow is emphasized. Fellows have their own continuum of care half-day day clinic once per week that is precepted by an attending and participate in three other half-day clinics per week that can vary in location from our five outpatient clinic settings:
- Adult - University Health Care Center (UHCC)
- Adult - Veterans Administration arthritis clinic (VA)
- Adult - The Hill Medical Center
- Pediatric Rheumatology Outpatient Center – Physicians Office Building
- Upstate Rheumatology (Homer)
The outpatient experience allows for the development of progressive responsibility with appropriate supervision by faculty. The end-goal is to have the fellow ready for unsupervised practice by becoming an expert in the evaluation and management of outpatient rheumatic disease problems while understanding patient’s natural history over several years.
Interdisciplinary Electives
The fellowship program includes a required elective experience with other disciplines. The goal of the elective experiences is for the fellow to learn, under the direction of experienced faculty from the related discipline, approaches to diagnoses and management used for patients with rheumatic diseases. It is preferred that the elective requirements are front-loaded in the first year to give more time for research in the second year. Fellows should use the learning portfolio function in MedHub to login to their Elective/QI/Research and Scholarly activities each week.