Fellowships in Adult Allergy and Clinical Immunology
Sponsored by the University of Colorado Denver In Conjunction with National Jewish Health
Note: We are listed in the ACGME and ERAS systems as: University of Colorado Program #0200731086
Why Choose Our Program?
Who We Will Choose
Goals of the Fellowship Program
The Curriculum
Consultations
Teaching
Salaries, Vacations, Leave
The Application Process
Faculty
Why Choose Our Program?
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National Jewish Health is known worldwide for treatment of patients
with respiratory, immune and allergic disorders, and for groundbreaking
medical research.
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For 12 consecutive years, U.S. News & World Report has ranked National Jewish the #1 respiratory hospital in the nation.
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Scholarly publisher Thomson Scientific has ranked National Jewish
among the 25 most influential research institutions in the world in its
areas of focus.
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July 13, 2007–University of Colorado Hospital is once again among
the nation’s best health care centers, ranking in seven of 16
specialties and reaching top-20 status in three categories, including
seventh nationwide for the treatment of patients with respiratory
disorders, according to the latest “America’s Best Hospitals” survey by
U.S.News & World Report.
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Unique opportunity to study at two institutions, both of which focus on treating patients and academic research.
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The faculty-to-student ratio is very high, which allows for one-one interactions between fellows and faculty members.
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State of the art patient clinics and bench science and clinic trial research laboratories.
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Opportunity for hands on experience with Rush Immunotherapy procedures, Aspirin and other drug de-sensitization procedures.
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Internationally recognized faculty physicians and scientists.
Who We Will Choose
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Residents in our program must be a U.S. citizen, lawful permanent resident, refugee, asylee, or possess the appropriate documentation to allow Resident to legally train at the University of Colorado Denver School of Medicine.
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Highly motivated, dedicated, and enthusiastic individuals interested in being physicians and scientists.
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Individuals interested in clinic training and research training.
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Individuals interested in making research discoveries and
publishing those discoveries that will improve they way we treat
patients.
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Individuals capable of becoming world-renown physicians and scientists.
Goals of the Fellowship Program
The primary objective of this fellowship is to
train outstanding physician-scientists and clinician-educators who will
develop new and additional understanding and knowledge of the
mechanisms and treatment of allergic and immunologic diseases. These
physician-scientists will also become the teachers of allergy and
clinical immunology for future generations.
To accomplish this we have developed a two-stage
training program with two years devoted to fulfillment of the
requirements for certification by the American Board of Allergy and
Immunology. The first year is primarily devoted to clinical training.
The second year of fellowship is dedicated to completion of clinical
requirements and research training, which involves coursework,
laboratory research, writing manuscripts and grants and is designed to
provide the foundation of skills and experience that are necessary for
success in academic medicine. The program is open to physicians who are
either certified by or eligible to sit for the certification
examinations of the American Board of Internal Medicine.
Currently, three fellows enter the program each year.
The Curriculum
The fellowship training is conducted on the
campuses of the National Jewish Health and the University of Colorado
Denver (UCD). The Allergy, Asthma and Immunology Clinics for the University
are held at the new Anschutz Campus. Cross training in Pediatrics is
done at the National Jewish Center and the Children’s Hospital.
During the first year the fellows rotate between
the two campuses every two months. At National Jewish one receives
experience in management of severe asthma as well as experience in
management of patients with allergic rhinitis, urticaria, angioedema,
food and drug allergy, and adult immunodeficiency diseases. The UCD
Clinics also provide experience in diagnosis and management of asthma,
allergic rhinitis, urticaria, anaphylaxis, angioedema and immune
deficiency diseases. This gives the fellow the opportunity to witness
diverse approaches to recognition and management of allergic and
immunologic diseases. The UCD rotations also provide experience in
clinics that are important to the practice of Allergy and Clinical
Immunology such as dermatology, rheumatology, ENT. In addition, fellows
are required to rotate in the Clinical Immunology Laboratories to learn
the methods used and applications of assays such as flow cytometry,
immunoglobulin and antibody quantitation, interpretation of protein
electrophoresis patterns and assays of complement activity and
cell-mediated immunity.
Consultations
The fellows are the first to respond to requests
for consultations from other departments at UCD. These consultations
may involve different questions that are relevant to Allergy and
Clinical Immunology. Examples include immune deficiency disorders,
difficult asthma, adverse drug reactions, anaphylaxis and urticaria.
Teaching
The Faculty to Fellow ratio is very high with 13
full time faculty. Case-by-case teaching is done in the clinics and is
supplemented by several formal-teaching conferences:
Allergy Journal Club
Allergy Journal Club is a monthly forum for
surveying the published literature regarding specific topics relevant
to the clinical practice of allergy. First and second year residents
present summaries of assigned articles. The articles offer a historical
perspective of the particular issue being discussed and highlight
controversial issues. 10-12 articles are typically covered per session
and a faculty preceptor guides the discussion.
Immunology Journal Club at UCD
Resident and faculty discuss one or two articles
that have been published recently on clinical immunologic topics. The
purpose of this journal club is to carefully critique an article
regarding hypothesis testing, methodology, statistics, and conclusions.
Denver Allergy Rounds
Denver Allergy Rounds is a weekly, city-wide
meeting of allergists from the private practices and academic centers.
Lecturers include local allergists and invited guest speakers of
national prominence. A curriculum format is used to cover topics in
basic and clinical allergy and immunology.
Division Meeting
There are approximately 6-8 business meetings per
year where issues of concern to the fellows and training program are
discussed and the applicants for fellowships are reviewed both for
interviewing purposes and for acceptance purposes. The fellows are
evaluated twice yearly, the program is evaluated once a year, and other
Division business is discussed. The fellows are required to attend the
first 15 minutes of each business meeting as scheduled throughout the
year.
Resident Didactic Series
This is a weekly meeting with both pediatric and
adult residents where they review a major immunology textbook.
Additionally, the faculty present didactic lectures on various allergy
and immunology topics. The residents also review board type questions
on the topic of the week.
M&M Conference
Morbidity and Mortality Conference, held
quarterly where complicated cases are discussed. Core competencies of
Medical Knowledge and Practice-Based Learning and Improvement are
addressed.
Salaries, Vacations, Leave
Salaries are determined according to the fiftieth
percentile of the Western Region according to ACGME guidelines and then
Stipends are set by the Dean of the University of Colorado Denver. Stipends are increased each year according to
the consumer price point index. Currently house staff are given 21
calendar days of vacation annually.
The Application Process
All applications will now be submitted online through ERAS (Electronic Residency Application Service).
2009 ERAS Selection Process Timeline is:
- November 15, 2009 ERAS Application program opens
- December 31, 2009 is the deadline to apply to our program
- January 1-April 15, 2010 interviews
- May 2, 2009 Rank Order List due
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May 19, 2010 Match Day
Application Process:
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Completed on-line application through the Electronic Residency Application Service(ERAS) system. Our Program Number is: 0200731086.
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Curriculum vitae.
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Personal statement addressing the following: 1) Why are you
interested in allergy and clinical immunology as a medical
sub-specialty? 2) What attracted you to our Program, and how will our
Program enhance your career goals? 3) Do you envision yourself
in a clinical or academic career (or a combination of both) and how
much time do you envision yourself doing clinic-based work versus
academic research?
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MPSE
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Official test transcripts for all applicable examinations (USMLE, COMLEX).
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Three original letters of recommendation.
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Any other ERAS application requirements.
Program Director and Coordinator information:
Rohit K. Katial, M.D.
Program Director National Jewish Health
1400 Jackson Street, J329
Denver, CO 80206
Phone: (303) 270-2913
Fax: (303) 398-1806 | Diedre Versluis, MA
Program Coordinator
National Jewish Health
1400 Jackson Street, K624
Denver, CO 80206
Phone: (303) 270-2913
Fax: (303) 398-1806 |
Faculty
Stephen C. Dreskin, MD, PhD (please see the University of Colorado Web site)
Shaila Gogate, MD
Magdalena M. Gorska, MD
Ronald J. Harbeck, PhD
Hua Huang, MD, PhD
Rohit Katial, MD
Charles H. Kirkpatrick, MD (please see the University of Colorado Web site)
Harold S. Nelson, MD
Alan Schocket, MD (please see the University of Colorado Web site)
Tho Quy Truong, MD
Richard W. Weber, MD
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