The general principles overriding the residency program are:
- Education comes first
- Residency should be an enjoyable experience.
The program is driven by education – not by service needs –
for all of its residents (11 traditional categorical internal medicine
per year, and four preliminary interns). The foundation of the program,
which is fully accredited with the ACGME and The American Osteopathic
Association, is its written curriculum, a document that provides the specific
educational goals for each of the rotations in internal medicine in each
year of training.

The strength of our program resides in the spectrum of patients and the
diversity of the attendings with whom our residents work. The exposure
to community-based, voluntary attendings in both general medicine and
subspecialties complements exposure to the full-time faculty. Unlike the
prototypical university urban medical center in which the overwhelming
majority of patients are admitted from the immediate surrounding community,
the patient population cared for by our residents represents a balanced
mixture of private and service patients.
Our program also offers the house staff the resources of seven on-site,
fully accredited sub-specialty training programs. These include fellowships
in Cardiology, Nephrology, Hematology-Oncology, Pulmonary-Critical Care,
Infectious Diseases, Interventional Cardiology, Cardiac Electrophysiology,
and Heart Failure. Fellows in these seven subspecialty areas interact
with residents rotating through their respective consultation services,
the Intensive Care Unit, the Coronary Care Unit, and the Oncology inpatient
service. In addition, fellows actively participate in teaching and supervision
of house staff on both an inpatient and outpatient basis, and facilitate
house staff participation in research activities within their subspecialty
divisions.
During the first two years, residents spend the bulk of their inpatient
time rotating through the general medical floor and select subspecialty
floor rotations. The first two years are also supplemented with experiences
in ICU, CCU, Emergency Department, and certain subspecialties. A teaching
attending is assigned to each inpatient team, supervising housestaff in
the care of all teaching service patients and conducting daily teaching rounds.
On Sunday through Friday nights, a night float team admits patients to
the teaching services from 8 p.m. to 7 a.m. These night admissions are
presented at Morning Report and assigned to the floor teams. This system
permits us to control the flow of admissions and ensures that the education
of the resident remains the priority of the program. Caps are established
for admissions per day and total census for each PGY 1 and PGY 2 resident
according to ACGME guidelines and these caps are enforced strictly. Weekend
coverage is provided with a split shift by the floor team members from
Saturday morning through Sunday evening, ensuring adherence with ACGME
duty-hour regulations enacted in July 2011.
A sample rotation schedule is provided in the
Curriculum section.

Our residency is configured as a 2+6 residency which means that for every
six weeks of inpatient rotations the residents spend two weeks on an ambulatory
rotation that includes general medicine clinic as well as subspecialty
clinics. Ambulatory experiences are integral to the education of our residents.
In addition to the regularly scheduled two week ambulatory rotations,
the residents are expected to spend approximately 50% of their second
and third year subspecialty rotations in the ambulatory setting. These
blocks permit rotation through clinics in both medical and non-medical
specialties, as well as exposure to off-site private and community-based
practices.
The PGY 2 and 3 years include rotations through all the specialties of
internal medicine. The residents thus develop skills through consultation
service and specialty outpatient experiences.
We recognize the importance of certain administrative and non-medical
education throughout the residency. Formal education in medical ethics,
medical economics, utilization management, quality management, and legal
aspects of medicine is provided throughout the residency.

Nearly all core rotations in our program take place at Newark Beth Israel
Medical Center. We are proud of the friendly, intimate atmosphere which
we can offer. We also pay careful attention to the human aspects of residency
training by providing a favorable call schedule, meals while on call,
and comfortable, convenient sleeping quarters with a modern, well-equipped lounge.
The affiliation with Rutgers-New Jersey Medical School and RWJBarnabas
Health also provides residents the opportunity to participate in educational
experiences at near-by top medical schools and leading health care facility.
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Rotation Overview

INTERNS
Rotation |
Categorical |
Preliminary |
Medicine Floors |
12 weeks
2 weeks ER
|
12 weeks |
Ambulatory |
14 weeks |
14 weeks |
Night Float |
4 weeks |
4 weeks |
Night Medicine |
2 weeks |
2 weeks |
ICU |
8 weeks |
8 weeks |
Elective |
4 weeks |
6 weeks |
Cardiology Consult |
2 weeks |
2 weeks |
Vacation |
4 weeks |
4 weeks |
PGY-2's:
Rotation |
|
Medicine floors |
4 weeks |
Ambulatory |
12 weeks |
Night Float |
4 weeks |
ICU |
8 weeks |
CCU |
4 weeks |
Infectious Diseases |
2 weeks |
Endocrinology |
2 weeks |
Hem-Onc |
4 weeks |
Geriatrics |
2 weeks |
Elective/Selective |
4 weeks |
ER |
2 weeks |
Vacation |
4 weeks |
PGY-3's:
Rotation |
Elective |
4 weeks |
General Med floors |
4 weeks |
Medical Officer of Day |
4 week days
4 week nights
|
ICU |
4 weeks |
Rheumatology |
4 weeks |
Ambulatory |
10 weeks |
Neurology consults |
2 weeks |
GI consults |
2 weeks |
Pulmonary consults |
2 weeks |
Renal consults |
2 weeks |
Hematology |
2 weeks |
Cardiology |
4 weeks |
Vacation |
4 weeks |
Call Schedule Summary:
Floor months: During all NBIMC floor months (GMF, Oncology, Geriatrics)
residents work "long shifts" depending on their rotation. These
shifts are until 8:00 pm, with Night Float relieving floor teams at 8:00 pm.
ICU: All Critical Care rotations now incorporate a rotating Night Shift
schedule, whereby residents spend one week per month working nights, and
three weeks working days. During their Night Shift week residents work
from 8:00 PM through morning rounds the next day, thus ensuring that they
leave by 10:00 AM.
Night Float: The Night Float team consists of one intern and one PGY-2
who work as a team Sunday through Friday nights from 8:00 pm till 7:00
am. In addition, one intern will work in the Night Medicine Rotation under
the direct supervision of an in-house hospitalist. They are relieved after
Morning Report at 8:30 am each day.
MOD call: The weekday MOD responsibilities are divided between a Day-MOD,
who works from 8:00 am to 8:00 pm, and a Night-MOD, who works from 8:00
pm to 8:00 am Monday through Friday. Saturday and Sunday MOD responsibilities
are covered by PGY-3's on Subspecialty Services other than Pulmonary.
Generally each PGY-3 on Consults does one weekend of days and one weekend
of nights during each of their consult months.
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