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Surgical Infectious Disease Fellowship Program
The section of Surgical Infectious Disease participates
in the day-to-day activities of the general, transplant,
and subspecialty surgical services. As would be expected,
the Surgical Infectious Disease Service works closely with
the Transplant Center and the Surgical Intensive Care Unit.
Our faculty, nurse clinicians, and
medical fellows provide consultation and recommendations
in diagnosing and managing infections in surgical patients.
Consultation takes place by telephone if a restricted antimicrobial
agent is requested, but more often the consulting team deals
with what are often very difficult issues at the patient's
bedside in the Surgical Intensive Care Unit or on the surgical
ward.
A
formal service seminar is held on Friday morning to discuss
interesting cases and review in-depth a specific area of
the literature. In addition, each medical fellow rotating
on the service is encouraged to assume the direction of
a specific clinical project. This project may entail a retrospective
review of a certain problem, an unusual case, or a small
series of cases, but more frequently involves overseeing
the conduct of large-scale randomized clinical trials. The
focus is on the use of antibacterial, antifungal, or antiviral
agents for the prophylaxis and treatment of a variety of
infectious diseases.
Medical fellows are selected to rotate
on this service based on their interest in infectious disease
problems. They concurrently pursue research training. One
fellow is assigned to the consulting team for a given week,
once every six to eight weeks. Most fellows have rotated
on this service for two to three years.
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