Neonatology Fellowship
The aims and structure of the UK Neonatology Fellowship
program follow those advised and expected by the Accreditation Council of
Graduate
Medical Education (ACGME) and the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP).
The
program is based on the following tenets: The existence of any clinical
subspecialist is to provide patient care by the application of knowledge gained
through
studies of the population/system of interest. The knowledge offered by
subspecialists is by definition different in content or in depth to that offered
by the specialist
- thus the clinical need. The role of the subspecialist is a dual one: 1)
he/she must maintain excellent clinical standards through clinical practice
and in-depth teaching of current information and 2) must advance his/her
discipline through research and the dissemination of the results.
The objective of the program is the education of neonatal fellows in clinical, research, teaching and some administrative aspects of Neonatology. The fellowship lasts three years and is a structured one with set curricula and a focus upon teaching.
The teaching staff of the Division of Neonatology are Sub-board certified in Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine. They are State Licensed faculty whose hospital privileges are in good standing. They are committed to scholarly activity. The fellows, faculty and program are regularly evaluated.
The patient population provides an adequate volume and variety of high-risk obstetrics and newborn disorders. There is input from many subspecialty services, including pediatric surgery and pediatric cardiology. The NICU has several types of ventilators and nitric oxide and ECMO therapies are provided. The fellows attend follow-up clinic where they learn skills in evaluation, management of the needs of the sick newborn after discharge and can develop an understanding of the impact on the family of the socioeconomic and psychological stresses involved.
The facilities at the University of Kentucky include a state-of-the-art Neonatal Intensive Care Unit and Children's Hospital. All of the consulting staff, laboratory and radiological facilities of a major teaching center are at hand. There is laboratory space and equipment for research, including computer facilities for data manipulation and analysis. Statistical consultation is available. The library offers excellent service and courses in the retrieval of information by the Internet.
The aim is to implement a scholarly and critical approach with the acquisition
of clinical diagnostic, technical, therapeutic and consultative abilities
in the management of sick newborn and subsequently during follow-up care, resulting
in an ability to make appropriate and cost-effective decisions. Fellows are
supervised by faculty but expected to become independent over time. Clinical
duties involve a total of 9-12 months of NICU care in the three-year time
period.
Follow-up clinic is attended 1/month.
There is a core lecture series at the start of the academic year. A lecture
series is given in statistics and every other year a teaching seminar series
is offered. The basic science and clinical conferences are structured to provide
three-year curricula that interdigitate and give the fellow a rounded education
in neonatal-perinatal medicine.
Tuesday
| Vermont-Oxford Meeting |
Wednesday |
Fellow's Basic Science Seminar |
Thursday |
Pediatric Grand Rounds |
|
Clinical Perinatal Conference |
|
ECMO / NO Conference (1/month) |
Friday |
Rotating Neonatology Conference |
1 |
Division Meeting |
2 |
Journal Club |
3 |
Perinatal Pathology Conference |
4 |
Case Discussions (M & M) |
5 |
Divisional Research Seminar |
Aim: To prepare the fellow for performing research through the development of a questioning attitude and a critical analysis of the medical literature, including new therapies.
Performance: The ACGME / AAP research requirements state that the fellow should be involved in the design, conduct, evaluation and preparation for publication of either a laboratory or clinical project.
Progress: A Research Committee is set up for each fellow.
Application forms are available from:
Henrietta S. Bada, MD, MPH
Professor of Pediatrics,
Director, Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine Fellowship Program
University of Kentucky
800 Rose Street
Lexington, KY 40536-0084.
Telephone: (859) 323-5530
Fax: (859) 323-8031
E-mail: hbada2@uky.edu
Teaching Faculty |
Research Interest |
Henrietta Bada, MD, MPH |
Effects of Prenatal drug exposure on the fetus, newborn, and childhood
behavoir |
Hubert Ballard, MD |
Treatment and intervention of BPD |
Nirmala Desai, MD |
Nutrition; pain control in the newborn |
Paul DeFranco, DO |
Cytokines in the newborn |
Eric Reynolds, MD |
Pulmonary hypertension and feeding development |
Lori Shook, MD |
Newborn Hearing Screening |
Jackie Sampers, PhD |
Developmental follow-up |
|