I am a current PGY-4. We interview all rotators. We usually have 1 interview weekend in early January we interview half of the applicants on that Friday and the other half on Saturday with a resident-only dinner on Friday evening. Because of this unique setup it would be impossible to interview when you rotated here.
The focus of our residency is strictly on education, not scut work and not mindless resident âbusywork.â This ideology comes from the top down, as you will often hear our program director Dr. Doug Letson (oncology) say what matters most is the resident education. This detail cannot be overemphasized because the entire residency is designed around maximum opportunities for education.
In our program, we have about 1/3 of rotations with private community surgeons, 1/3 of rotations with Florida Orthopaedic Institute (FOI), a private group (Sanders, Sagi, Clare, Mighells, etc) that functions more academically than many academic groups, and 1/3 with USF academic attendings. This makes for a great well-rounded experience.
Scut work is minimal if at all. Each of our rotations has Physician Assistants (PAâs) paid to help take care of the floor work (dictations, rounding, consults, H&Pâs and assist YOU in surgery). Keep in mind PAâs are not a threat but a GREAT help, they do not have any interest in learning to do cases but rather help you close surgical sites, help with patient positioning, retracting, etc. making your experience so much better.
Just a few of our strengths:
Trauma Rotation (Tampa General Hospital) â high volume, complex cases, as well as bread & butter cases. Plus you get to work with leaders in the field (Sanders, Sagi, Herscovici, Watson).
Peds â We do 6 weeks at Shriners (nice for seeing the rare congenital type stuff) and the remaining time (18 weeks) at All Childrens hospital (private group) where we see bread & butter peds trauma, good volume of peds scoli (computer navigated), as well as general peds ortho.
Research block â 3 months dedicated to research with NO clinical duties, that means NO call. Enormous amount of opportunities for research both clinical and biomechanical.
Joints â Work with Bernasek (high volume ~25 cases/week) and Raterman (high volume BHRâs â 3rd highest in country for BHR ~20 cases/week), and Vo (high volume ~30-35 cases/week). Plus outstanding experience at VA with joint fellowship trained attending, Markee.
Oncology â All residents agree this is one the best rotations because we learn an outstanding amount of bone radiology as well as outstanding operative techniques from our PD. Letson is an outstanding, teacher, and true personal friend. He truly cares about each and every resident. This is quite evident on a daily basis.
These are just a few of the rotations. Honestly, I canât think of any weaknesses. We have all subspecialty rotations covered: Sports, Hand, Shoulder/Elbow, Foot/Ankle, Spine. I could go on and on about how great these rotations are as well but leave it to say if you have specific questions I will be happy to answer.
We are "required" to go to Musculoskeletal Oncology Review (MOR) every year as a group, the entire residency - course is in Key West; because Letson runs the course. Always a great time! Plus you get one USF sponsored meetings annually, plus one industry sponsored meeting annually. Also, any meeting you get an abstract accepted you get to go for free as well. Since we live in FL there is a lot of meetings right in our area, these are free as well to USF residents.
We have a great weekly didactic conferenc every Friday AM, that is subspecialty-based. This is protected time for resident education from 7-12 every Friday. We have great attendance of our attendings.
Next year, our annual cadaver dissection will be every other week with fresh frozen cadaver rather than using the embalmed cadavers that we have used for past 3 years. Also, FOI has anatomy/cadaver facilities where there are many many courses for residents and attendings that come from all around the country. All of these courses are always free to the USF residents.
We operate very early. As a PGY-2 you will be doing TKA and THA cases skin to skin with the attendings assisting. Our call system is very manageable and almost all of it except 2 rotations is home call.
We just received our RRC accreditation a few months ago for 4 years. Oh yeah, you canât beat living in FL either. Year round nice weather, great sports, nice beaches, Disney World 1.5 hours away.
I could not think of a stronger program both with our academic experience as well as our operative experience. I am extremely happy and proud of our program.
I will be happy to answer any questions.
Paul Edwards, MD