Baylor University Medical Center at Dallas

Affiliated with Texas A & M Health Science Center , College of Medicine Dallas Campus — Dallas, TX

  • Trauma only
  • Critical Care only
  • Trauma & Critical Care
  • Acute Care Surgery
  • Advanced Practitioner
  • Duration: 1 year
  • Positions available: 4
  • Salary: 68,848, PGY-6
  • Program Director: Laura Bruce Petrey, MD, FACS

Last updated: September 19, 2019


Baylor University Medical Center (BUMC) is a 1,008-bed tertiary care hospital in the heart of Dallas with a high level of acuity and approximately 39,000 admissions a year. Since 1997, the American College of Surgeons has recognized BUMC as a Level 1 Trauma Center with approximately 2,400 admissions yearly. There are 123 total ICU beds, 57 of which are surgical ICU beds. Currently, our surgical critical care faculty provides care for trauma, acute care surgery, general surgery, solid organ transplant, heart and lung transplant, cardiothoracic, neurosurgery, orthopedic and orthopedic spinal surgery, ENT, oral surgery, OB-GYN, and plastic surgery. The surgeons in the Division of Trauma, Critical Care and Acute Care Surgery have always been closely involved in general surgery resident education (9 residents a year), as well as research and quality initiatives. Our surgeons also serve as Texas A & M Health Science Center College of Medicine faculty and are heavily involved in medical student education. There are 48 medical students in each class that rotate on our campus starting in their 2nd year. The Division of Trauma, Critical Care and Acute Care Surgery faculty is a diverse group including surgical critical emergency medicine and pulmonary critical care intensivists, and 14 of the 15 faculty are Surgical Critical Care Board Certified.

The ACGME approved our Surgical Critical Care Fellowship in March 2016 for four (4) fellowship positions, although we currently have funding for three (3). The goal of our Surgical Critical Care Fellowship program is to prepare the fellows to function as qualified practitioners at the advanced level of performance expected of Board-certified sub-specialists. The fellowship will allow fellows to develop proficiency in the management of critically-ill and injured patients, develop necessary qualifications to supervise surgical critical care units, and to conduct scholarly activities in trauma/surgical critical care.
The 12-month fellowship is designed to provide surgical critical care fellows with an education in the principles and practice of state-of-the art trauma and surgical critical care according to medical knowledge and patient care, practice-based learning and improvement, systems-based practice, professionalism, and interpersonal and communication skills. This is accomplished by exposing the surgical critical care fellows to a broad array of surgical illnesses through didactic instruction in the basic and clinical sciences, as well as education during teaching rounds, primary patient care, educational conferences, and specialized rotations. Upon completion of training, the surgical critical care fellows are expected to integrate the acquired knowledge into the clinical situation to demonstrate proficiency in surgical critical care decision-making, specific organ system support, evaluation of new technology and treatment techniques, ICU administration, outcomes assessment, research design, and interaction with patients, families, and health care personnel. The Surgical Critical Care Fellowship will be individualized to each applicant and is focused on developing their future practices whether in academics or a private setting. The fellowship year is also customized to address specific deficits that the candidate feels that he/she might have with respect to operative, non-operative, and interventional management.

Rotations
Surgical and Trauma ICU (STICU) —3 months
23 ICU beds

Cardiothoracic and Transplant Surgery ICU (CTICU) — 4 months
34 ICU beds, Including patients with heart and lung transplants, total artificial hearts, durable and percutaneous LVAD and RVADs (including Impella) ECMO, and solid organ transplants including liver, kidney and pancreas

Advanced Cardiac Anesthesiology/ Intensive Care Nephrology —1 Month
Cardiac Anesthesia with a CTICU focus - ½ month
Patients will be seen pre-operatively, in the operating room and post-operatively in the CTICU. Involves a lot of procedures such as intubation, swan-ganz catheter placement, transesophageal echocardiogram, use of vasopressors and ionotropes, various ventilator strategies, use of massive transfusion and all of this in very critically ill patients.

ICU Nephrology - ½ month
Patients in both STICU and CTICU with a focus on management of CRRT, Hemodialysis and electrolytes

Medical Intensive Care Unit (MICU) — 1 month

Acute Care and Trauma Surgery — 1 month acting as Junior Faculty

Two elective months (only one can be non-surgical)
Possible electives:
Nephrology
Vascular Surgery
Colorectal Surgery
Infectious Diseases
Interventional Radiology
Cardiothoracic Surgery
Thoracic Surgery
Anesthesia
GI/ Endoscopy
Or the PD will work with the fellow to tailor an elective that meets the fellow’s needs

Call Schedule
Home Call (Sunday through Wednesday)

In-house night call fellow available only Thursday through Saturday from 6 PM – 6 AM

ECMO Call only for the fellows on CTICU. The general surgery residents, attendings and nurse practitioners in-house can care for most issues and the fellows only get called or called in for valid reasons. An 80 –hour workweek per ACGME rules will apply at all times.

Night Call (6:00 PM to 6:00 AM Thursday through Saturday)

The fellow covers both the STICU and the CTICU, makes nightly rounds with the general surgery residents and Advanced Practice Practitioners as a team with a focus on education. The fellow will also respond to trauma activations as long as the ICU patients have been stabilized and will have opportunities to operate as a Junior Faculty.

Scholarly Activities
Conferences for surgical critical care include journal club, process improvement and quality assurance meetings, research and didactic lectures. Also, collegial interaction with the pulmonary critical care service and their fellows (2 per year) includes a weekly combined didactic lecture series that alternates between specialties. The fellows will participate in the Multidisciplinary Critical Care Knowledge Assessment Program (MCCKAP) along with an ASSET course, ATLS certification or re-certification and if available, an ATLS Instructor course.

Program started 2016

How to apply

Natalie.Gittus@BSWHealth.org  - (214) 865-3610 (phone) , (214) 820-7272 (fax)

Qualifications: Each fellow must successfully complete an ACGME-accredited specialty program and/or meet other eligibility criteria as specified by the Review Committee. The program must document that each fellow has met the eligibility criteria.

Prior to appointment in the program, fellows must have completed at least three clinical years in an ACGME-accredited graduate educational program in one of the following specialties: anesthesiology, emergency medicine, neurological surgery, obstetrics and gynecology, orthopedic surgery, otolaryngology surgery, thoracic surgery, vascular surgery, or urology.

Fellows who have completed an emergency medicine residency must also complete one preparatory year as an advanced preliminary resident in surgery at the institution where they will enroll in the surgical critical care fellowship. The content of this year should be defined jointly by the program directors of the surgery program and the surgical critical care program. It must include clinical experience in the foundations of surgery and the management of complex surgical conditions. At a minimum, this preparatory year of education must include supervised clinical experience in:
• Pre-operative evaluation, including respiratory, cardiovascular, and nutritional evaluation
• Pre-operative and post-operative care of surgical patients, including outpatient follow-up care
• Advanced care of injured patients
• Care of patients requiring abdominal, breast, head and neck, endocrine, transplant, cardiac, thoracic, vascular, and neurosurgical operations
• Management of complex wounds
• Minor operative procedures related to critical care, such as venous access, tube thoracostomy, and tracheostomy

Applicants with one of the following qualifications are eligible for appointment to either ACGME-accredited or TMB or ADA approved programs:
• Graduates of medical schools in the United States and Canada accredited by the Liaison Committee on Medical Education (LCME).
• Graduates of colleges of osteopathic medicine in the United States accredited by the American Osteopathic Association (AOA).
• Graduates of medical schools outside the United States and Canada (International Medical Graduates – IMGs) who meet the following qualifications:
1. Have received a currently valid certificate from the Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates prior to appointment.
2. Have a full and unrestricted license to practice medicine in a US licensing jurisdiction in which they are training.
3. Possess a Green card or procure a J-1 visa.
4. H1B visas are not sponsored by BUMC for Housestaff training.
• Graduates of medical schools outside the United States who have completed a Fifth Pathway program provided by an LCME-accredited medical school.
• Graduates of medical schools in the United States and Canada accredited by the (LCME) who are not United States citizens who meet the following qualifications:
1. Have a full and unrestricted license to practice medicine in a US licensing jurisdiction in which they are training.
2. Possess a Green card or procure a J-1 visa.
3. H1B visas are not sponsored by BUMC for Housestaff training.
For more information, send a request to the program coordinator, Natalie.Gittus@BSWHealth.org.

Complete an online application by August 15th. Applicants should submit a current Curriculum Vitae with three recent letters of recommendation through SAFAS (https://safas-sccpds.fluidreview.com/). The Baylor University Medical Center at Dallas Surgical Critical Care Fellowship program uses the National Residency Match Program (NRMP). Further inquiries can be directed to the program director at Laura.Petrey@BSWHealth.org

Research opportunities

Critical review of research is an integral requirement for the fellows. The fellows are expected to create two Practice Management Guidelines for Trauma topics and keep the current Guidelines up to date. Also, there are dedicated monthly research meetings with research support staff. The fellows are expected to develop at least one research project and to be submitted as an abstract for presentation at a national-level conference and complete a manuscript for publication in a peer-reviewed journal. There are ample opportunities to accomplish this during the one-year fellowship. If the fellows are meeting their research and fellowship expectations, they will also attend a national meeting, usually the Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma as a group and participate in the Dodgeball Tournament with our Baylor University Medical Center Dallas team.

About the hospital

  • Beds: 1008
  • ICU beds: 123
  • Annual ED visits: 105000
  • Annual trauma admissions: 2500
  • Trauma faculty: 15

Fellowship procedures

  • Total surgical (annually): 5400
  • General surgical: 60%
  • Trauma: 40%
  • Blunt trauma: 80%
  • Penetrating trauma: 20%

Location

3500 Gaston Avenue
Dallas, TX 75246
Website

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