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St. Louis Family Medicine Residency Curriculum

Training and learning experiences are designed to expose residents to a broad range of conditions and practice environments, preparing them for independent practice.

Rotations

St. Louis family medicine residents rotate through four main clinical sites:

PGY-1 Schedule

Rotations Length
Introduction to Ambulatory Care 4 weeks
Family Medicine Inpatient Service 12 weeks
Inpatient Pediatrics 8 weeks 
Intensive Care Unit 4 weeks
Obstetrics 8 weeks
Surgery 4 weeks
Newborn Nursery 4 weeks
Musculoskeletal 1 4 weeks
Behavioral Health 4 weeks
 

 PGY-2 Schedule

   
Family Medicine Inpatient Service 8 weeks
St. Mary’s Adult ER 4 weeks
Pediatric ER 4 weeks
Gynecology 4 weeks
Cardiology 4 weeks
Geriatrics 4 weeks
Ambulatory Pediatrics 1  4 weeks
Pain Management 4 weeks
Palliative Care 4 weeks
Electives 12 weeks
 

PGY-3 Schedule

Rotations Length
Senior Teach 4 weeks
Family Medicine Inpatient Service 8 weeks
Dermatology 4 weeks
Surgical Subspecialties 4 weeks
Musculoskeletal 2 4 weeks
Ambulatory Pediatrics 2 4 weeks
VA with Addiction/Psychiatry 4 weeks
VA Adult ER 4 weeks
Elective 12 weeks
 

Didactics

Grand Rounds

7:30-8:30 a.m. on the third Wednesday of the month

Faculty, residents and medical students attend Grand Rounds. Department faculty and specialists give lectures and provide updates and advances in their areas of expertise.

Weekly Sessions

Four hours per week

Each week, residents have protected time reserved for didactic lectures and sessions. Topics include:

  • Longitudinal board review
  • Journal club
  • Quality improvement forum
  • Case conferences 
  • Support group

Optional Concentrations

Maternity

The maternity concentration is designed for residents who wish to practice obstetrics. Training includes augmented elective and continuity experience in prenatal care, labor and delivery, and postpartum care. It also requires a related academic project. 

Sports Medicine

Residents pursuing a sports medicine concentration will provide athletes at least one year of medical care, including during daily training and on game days. They also must complete rotations in sports medicine, orthopedics, musculoskeletal radiology and physical therapy, as well as a related academic project. 

Addiction Medicine

The addiction medicine concentration allows residents to work with addiction medicine fellowship faculty as well as patience in the clinic. Residents will complete addiction-focused rotations at multiple clinical sites, study pain management techniques, manage 50+ primary patients with substance use disorders, and complete a scholarly project.