Clinical Experiences & Rotations
Initially, fellows will see patients one on one with the attending.
From this, the fellow will learn appropriate patient interaction
skills and become proficient in the diagnosis of sports related injuries.
As the year progresses, the fellow’s will begin to develop
their own patient base. Although the attending will ultimately be
responsible for these patients, the fellow will take primary responsibility
for their care. The fellow’s will be expected to treat these
patients as their own be able to make the appropriate diagnosis,
develop a comprehensive treatment program, schedule the necessary
intervention, perform the surgery, follow the patient post-operatively,
manage complications and ultimately see the patient through to recovery.
The fellow will also direct the patient’s physical therapy
and communicate with coaches and trainers as necessary.
Duties in the operating room, like the clinic, will increase as
the year progresses. At first, the fellows will assist the attending,
thus learning by both observation and hands-on experience. As they
become competent to perform a particular procedure, they will be
allowed to perform these surgeries on their own with the attending
acting as the assistant. Finally, as their surgical skills and confidence
improve, they will be allowed to perform certain surgeries on their
own, with the attending observing and intervening only when necessary.
This arrangement of gradually increasing responsibility is designed
to transition the fellow from the level of a chief resident to the
level of a highly competent orthopedic sports medicine practitioner.
Even though the fellow’s level of autonomy will be increasing
throughout the year, the fellows will never go unsupervised. The
amount of direct attending intervention will be according to the
individual skill level of the fellow. An attending will always be
immediately available in both the clinic and operating room setting.
Also, all surgical cases will be discussed prior to surgery at the
weekly “Case Presentation Conference”.
Call Schedule
The work week include two days of clinic, two days of surgery and
one educational day. Call is scheduled four to six weekends
a year. Our hospital is community hospital with no level 1 trauma.
The fellow, like the staff, will take call with a physician’s
assistant and orthopedic tech, and will have back up by the on call
attending and a fellowship trained trauma surgeon. It is the belief
of our staff that the call schedule described is the minimum amount
required to maintain adequate competency for routine orthopedic trauma
cases while not negatively impacting their sports medicine experience.
No weekday call is required. The fellow will be paid for call at
the staff rate.
Inpatient duties are limited to the appropriate post-operative care
of the fellow’s patients requiring in-patient surgery. These
cases will be rare, as most sports patients at our institution are
treated on an outpatient basis. The fellow will make inpatient rounds
while on call.