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Faculty
Thirty-five
faculty members, including clinical and
research fellows, actively participate in
educational, research and service activities
within the Department of Radiology. The
faculty is organized along subspecialty
divisions within the department. Each
division has an identified director
responsible for developing appropriate
reading lists and instructional curriculum
within the division for the education of
residents and fellows. The department also
has a physicist who teaches radiation
physics, radiation biology, radiation
protection, and diagnostic imaging to
residents.
Curriculum
PGY I
3 months
Medicine Floors*
1 month Night Float*
2 months MICU
1 month Rad Path/Anatomy*
1 month Elective
1 month Neurology
1 month Emergency Medicine*
2 months Radiology*
* call free
months
The two (2)
months of radiology are done during May and
June. An orientation for each resident is
done at this time to help with integration
and familiarization with the department of
Radiology.
PGY II – V
Radiology rotations during PGY II – V years
are each four (4) weeks in duration allowing
for thirteen (13)rotation blocks instead of
twelve (12). Although the curriculum is
subject to revision by the Curriculum
Committee, the time in each area currently
is outlined in the following table.
Rotation are arranged so that residents
rotate in each subspecialty area early, mid
and late in their residency to maximize
their opportunity for in depth learning in
each subject.
Rotation Required # of
blocks
|
Chest
|
4 |
|
GI |
3 |
|
Mamms |
3 |
|
Nucs/PET |
4 |
|
Neuro |
5 |
|
Cardiac |
1 |
|
Peds |
4 |
|
Angio |
5 |
|
CT |
4 |
|
MR |
4 |
|
Sono |
3 |
|
NIV |
2 |
|
Abdominal |
3 |
|
Research |
1 |
|
Electives |
3 |
|
AFIP |
1 |
|
Imaging
Sciences |
1 |
Conferences
There are eight
hour-long, clinical conferences for the
residents each week. Five are assigned to
subspecialty divisions on a rotational basis
and given by attending radiologists. Three
per week are resident film review
conferences where senior residents present
interesting cases and help prepare junior
residents prior to taking call. In addition
there are one-hour didactic chairman’s
rounds each week which consists of a
textbook review and differential diagnosis
conference. Grand Rounds, tumor board,
physics lectures, hands-on ultrasound
scanning conferences are also given. Monthly
Journal Club and QA conferences are
organized and presented by the faculty.
Grand Rounds, Neuroradiology, Vascular
Intervention, Perinatal Sonography and Tumor
Board conferences are interdepartmental with
active participation of multiple clinical
specialties that enhance their educational
content. All Sections of the department are
adequately staffed with faculty to function
without residents. This insures that
residents will be able to attend all
conferences.
Teaching
The
Department of Radiology is strongly
committed to teaching. The department has
been awarded 18 Golden Apples from the
medical students at the University of
Illinois. The department is also
aggressively engaged in continuing medical
education activities, sponsoring well
attended regional and national CME meetings.
In addition, several of the departmental
faculty are invited speakers at many
national radiology meetings.
Although the
faculty are involved in undergraduate and
continuing medical education, the central
focus of the department's teaching efforts
are the radiology residents.
On each of the
rotations described previously, the resident
is teamed with an assigned faculty. This
fosters close, informal interactions between
resident and faculty that promotes team work
and maximizes teaching opportunities.
Faculty actively participates in the work of
each section so that the residents should
complete work each non-call day by 5:30 pm
except in unusual instances. This is
designed not to construct a "Country Club"
atmosphere but to ensure that residents have
adequate time and energy to read each night.
In addition
there is major emphasis on the core of basic
knowledge in medical imaging in the form of
Chairman's Rounds. This is a weekly 60
minute didactic course given by the
department chairman. Over the course of a
year a standard medical imaging textbook,
1200 pages in length, is covered to give
each resident a basis from which to build.
We currently
offer advanced training, with fellowships in
Breast Imaging, and ACGME accredited
fellowship in Neuroradiology, and Vascular /
Interventional Radiology.
Facilities
Our residents clinical
educational experience is obtained at OSF
Saint Francis Medical Center, founded in
1877 by the Sisters of the Third Order of
St. Francis. The Medical Center has grown
into a 730-bed, Level 1 trauma center with
modernized facilities and state-of-the-art
technology.
The Department of Radiology annually
performs over 325,000 diagnostic imaging
studies of all types at the main hospital
campus and two outpatient centers . The
Department's array of radiology facilities
and equipment include:
General
5 Digital Fluoroscopy units
8 Radiography units with digital capability
(including tomography and a dedicated cranio-facial
unit)
Computed Tomograhy (CT)
7 Multidetector CT Scanners- including 64
and 16 detector scanners, PET/CT units, CT
fluoroscopy for interventional procedures
and 3-D post processing workstations
Magnetic Resonance (MRI)
6 1.5T MR scanners with MR spectroscopy,
cardiac imaging, functional neuro MR and
cerebral and peripheral MR angiography
capabilities
Sonograhy and Non-Invasive Vascular Lab
9 Philips IU-22 Ultrasound units and 3 IMEX
peripheral arterial doppler units
Interventional Radiology
4 Vascular/Interventional Radiology suites,
including an operating-room equivalent suite
for endovascular repair of aneurysms and a
neuro-interventional biplane suite, with
adjacent patient recovery unit. Five nurse
practitioners assist with patient
admissions, work-ups, rounds, consultations
and follow-ups in the hospital and in the
outpatient interventional radiology office.
Nuclear Medicine
2 PET/CT scanners (16 dectector fixed unit
and a 4 detector mobile unit), 2 Dual-head
SPECT cameras, 2 single-head SPECT cameras,
and 1 whole body camera
Mammography
Susan G. Komen Breast Center, a free
standing out-patient breast imaging center
with conventional film and digital
mammography units, computer-aided detection
for mammography, dedicated high resolution
sonography units for diagnostic and
ultrasound-guided core breast biopsy, stereotactic-guided core biopsy unit, breast
MRI for lesion detection and procedural
guidance, and computer-aided detection for
breast MRI.
PACS
All digital modalities, including CT, MRI,
ultrasound, nuclear medicine, digital
radiographs and digital angiograms are read
on computer workstations. Some radiographs
are still read on film. An entirely new PACS
system and digital radiography units,
planned for spring 2006, will make the
department entirely digital.
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