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Pediatric Residency Curriculum

Individualized and Innovative Curriculum

We meet with our residents to help guide their decisions along their individualized learning experience. Residents can choose from a long list of subspecialty rotations and electives in a timeframe that aligns with their personal learning needs and career goals. Whether it is choosing more time attending deliveries at Woman’s Hospital (one of the largest delivery hospitals in the country), doing a maternity/paternity elective, completing an advocacy project during a global health elective, working at a rural federally qualified health centers (FQHC) clinic, or taking a deeper dive into medical education, our program boasts many unique elective opportunities and prides itself on working with each resident to accommodate their personal needs and career goals.

Block Schedules for Categorical Residents

  • Postgraduate Year 2 (PGY2)

    • Inpatient: two months
    • Night Float: two weeks
    • Electives: five months
    • Pediatric Emergency Medicine: one month
    • PICU: six weeks total (divided into a two-week block and a four-week block)
    • NICU: one month
    • Adolescent Medicine: one month
    • Four weeks of vacation to be taken during elective or emergency medicine rotations
  • Postgraduate Year 1 (PGY1)

    • Inpatient: three months
    • Night Float: one month total (divided into two-week blocks)
    • Electives: three months
    • Development and Behavior: one month
    • Community Medicine: one month
    • Term Newborn: one month
    • Pediatric Emergency Medicine: one month
    • Hematology/Oncology: one month
    • Three weeks of vacation to be taken during elective or emergency medicine rotations
  • Postgraduate Year 3 (PGY3)

    • Inpatient: one and a half months
    • Night Float: two weeks
    • Electives: five months
    • Pediatric Emergency Medicine: one month
    • PICU: six weeks total (divided into a two-week block and a four-week block)
    • NICU: one month
    • Term Newborn: two weeks
    • Community Medicine or Primary Care Clinic: one month
    • Four weeks of vacation to be taken during elective, primary care or emergency medicine rotations

Block Schedules for Primary Care Track Residents

  • Postgraduate Year 1 (PGY1)

    • Inpatient: three months
    • Night Float: one month total (divided into two-week blocks)
    • Electives: two months
    • Development and Behavior: one month
    • Community Medicine: one month
    • Term Newborn: one month
    • Pediatric Emergency Medicine: one month
    • Hematology/Oncology: one month
    • Primary Care Clinic: one month
    • Three weeks of vacation to be taken during elective, primary care or emergency medicine rotations
  • Postgraduate Year 2 (PGY2)

    • Inpatient: one month
    • Night Float: four weeks
    • Electives: five months
    • Pediatric Emergency Medicine: one month
    • PICU: one month
    • NICU: one month
    • Adolescent Medicine: one month
    • Primary Care Clinic: one month
    • Four weeks of vacation to be taken during elective, primary care or emergency medicine rotations
  • Postgraduate Year 3 (PGY3)

    • Inpatient: one month
    • Night Float: two weeks
    • Electives: five and a half months
    • Pediatric Emergency Medicine: one month
    • PICU: six weeks total (divided into a two-week block and a four-week block)
    • NICU: one month
    • Term Newborn: one month
    • Primary Care Clinic: one month
    • Four weeks of vacation to be taken during elective, primary care or emergency medicine rotations

Electives

Electives are designed to enrich the educational experience of residents with their needs, interests, and/or future professional plans. Examples of elective offerings include:

  • Advocacy
  • Allergy-Immunology
  • Child Psychiatry
  • Community-Based Ambulatory Care
  • Dermatology
  • Endocrine
  • Gastroenterology
  • Genetics
  • Infectious Disease
  • International Medicine
  • Maternal Fetal Medicine
  • Nephrology
  • Palliative Care
  • Pediatric Surgery
  • Pulmonology
  • Quality Improvement
  • Radiology
  • Research
  • Rural Primary Care
  • Simulation
  • Sleep Medicine
  • Surgical Subspecialties (ENT, Urology, Orthopedics/Sports Medicine, Neurosurgery, Ophthalmology)
  • Quality and Safety

    We offer an innovative curriculum focused on providing our residents the required tools to help change the system of care and cross the "quality chasm." Residents participate in a didactic and experiential curriculum that provides the framework for working in multidisciplinary teams to improve care. Residents complete at least one quality improvement project during the program.
  • Research and Scholarly Activity

    We encourage active resident participation in scholarly activity during the residency including resident presentations at Pediatric Grand Rounds, case report presentations at regional/national meetings and submissions to peer reviewed journals, as well as opportunities to participate in a national practice-based research network (CORNET, sponsored by the Academic Pediatrics Association and based in the Continuity Clinic).

    Residents also can conduct an independent original research project (i.e., randomized controlled trial or retrospective review of charts) with the support of a faculty research mentor and the Pediatric Research Steering Committee to help facilitate design, funding and implementation of the project.

  • Advocacy

    Interns participate in a focused Community Medicine rotation that provides an understanding of the problems and challenges in mobilizing effective community resources aimed at delivering safe, effective, efficient and timely care for their pediatric patients. This experience is supplemented by participation in a faculty-led case-based advocacy curriculum. With this background residents complete a community medicine/advocacy project months prior to completion of their residency.

    The goal of the Community Medicine/Advocacy Project is to challenge each of our residents to “open their eyes,” go into their community, and carefully analyze the system of care that is designed to keep patients healthy. Each resident is encouraged to complete a CATCH grant as part of this process.

    Components of the Community Medicine rotation include, but are not limited to:

    • Working with at-risk youth at the Baton Rouge Big Buddy after-school program.
    • Monthly school-based health clinics. Interns see patients alongside an upper-level resident. Upper levels can see patients alone with faculty supervision over the phone.
    • Teaching mental health awareness to middle school and high schoolers.
    • Working with a pediatric ER physician monthly at Our Lady of the Lake’s child abuse clinic.
    • Shadowing a WIC officer to establish families with Louisiana’s supplemental nutrition program.
    • Shadowing an inpatient and outpatient social worker in Our Lady of the Lake Children’s Hospital and the local public school systems.
    • Involved in multi-disciplinary meetings with the Baton Rouge police department to review child trafficking cases and child death review.
    • Weekly community medicine discussions with the Tulane pediatric residency via Zoom.
    • Seeing college patients at LSU Health Clinic (GYN, psych, nutrition, counseling).
  • Team Building and Leadership

    Team building exercises begin during intern orientation and are intertwined with resident activities throughout the academic year. Protected time for the annual overnight retreat in the fall and day-long class retreats in the spring highlight our emphasis on residents as community leaders while demonstrating the success that can be achieved when working as a team.

  • Pediatric Board Preparation

    Our board preparation, overseen by Dr. Andres Carrion, encompasses a variety of educational tools allowing us to individualize board prep. In addition to everyone receiving textbooks, flash cards and a question bank from MedStudy and TruLearn, we send residents to a live board review (or virtual if desired) course as a PGY3. We administer in-house in-training exams throughout the year as well as monthly board review sessions designed to reinforce board-relevant content specifications. PGY3s have a self-led board review course that takes place throughout the academic year. Residents are assigned board coaches if their ITE score is below the national average. Each resident meets with Dr. Carrion and/or the program co-directors to delineate the best prep curriculum beyond the program’s baseline. All PGY3s have the opportunity to do a board review elective (separate from board review course).

  • Faculty Advisor System

    Residents meet with faculty advisors at least twice a year. Goals for each meeting are predetermined and include evaluation review, updates on career plans and progress toward project completion, and fine tuning of individualized learning plans. Residents review progress toward goals and career plans with the program director at least twice per academic year.

  • Conferences

    Morning Report
    Monday, Wednesday, Friday: 7:30 - 8 a.m.

    Pediatric Grand Rounds
    Two Tuesdays per month

    Evidence-Based Medicine Curriculum/Journal Club
    Monthly (during Thursday lectures)

    Morbidity and Mortality Conferences
    One Tuesday per month