About the Program

The Temple Anesthesiology categorical residency program is a four-year fully integrated residency program that will provide you with a well-rounded, robust, and world-class education. Rather than spending your PGY-1 year completing a traditional internal medicine, surgery, or transitional year, Temple integrates your 12 months of required Fundamental Clinical Skills of Medicine (formerly known as the Clinical Base Year) longitudinally into your first three years of residency. This allows the opportunity for more thoughtful and meaningful integration of your non-Anesthesiology rotations into the Anesthesiology curriculum. It also means that, unlike most programs…

            Your first two months as a physician will be spent practicing Anesthesiology

 As a PGY-1, you will spend the first two months of your residency training in an operating room one-on-one with Attending Anesthesiologists in an intensive onboarding program that will prepare you by the end of August to be safe and knowledgeable enough to be supervised under standard one-to-two supervisory ratios.

The PGY-1 year begins with an eight-week orientation period during which residents are introduced to their new roles in the operating room. Resident and Faculty preceptors guide you through your first eight weeks in the operating rooms, and formal didactic sessions provide basic instruction in preanesthetic evaluation, preparation of the operating room for an anesthetic, and the conduct of and recovery from anesthesia.

After those two months, you’ll spend at least one month in the ORs, then you’ll periodically proceed to non-Anesthesiology rotations including internal medicine, surgery, and emergency medicine, among others. The breakdown year-by-year is as follows:

 

Training Year

Clinical Anesthesiology Rotations

Fundamental Clinical Skills Rotations

PGY-1

One-to-One OR Orientation – 8 weeks

General OR Anesthesia – 12-14 weeks

OR Anesthesia Night Float – 4-6 weeks

Vacation – 3 weeks

 

Internal Medicine Wards – 8 weeks

Internal Medicine Night Float – 2 weeks

Emergency Medicine – 4 weeks

Medical/Respiratory Intensive Care Unit (MICU/RICU) – 4 weeks

Inpatient Perioperative Medicine Consultations – 4 weeks

Scholarly/Academic Time – 2 weeks
 

PGY-2

General OR Anesthesia – 10 weeks

Neuroanesthesia – 4 weeks

Cardiac Anesthesia – 4 weeks

Thoracic Anesthesia – 4 weeks

Obstetric Anesthesia – 4 weeks

Perioperative Medicine – 4 weeks

Obstetric Anesthesia Night Float – 2 weeks

OR Anesthesia Night Float – 6 weeks

Scholarly/Academic Time – 2 weeks

Vacation – 3 weeks
 

Trauma Surgery – 4 weeks

General Surgery – 4 weeks

Surgical Intensive Care – 4 weeks

 

PGY-3

General OR Anesthesia – 12 weeks

Cardiac Anesthesia – 4 weeks

Vascular Anesthesia – 4 weeks

Pediatric Anesthesia @ Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) – 8 weeks

Acute Pain Management – 4 weeks

Chronic Pain Management – 4 weeks

Cardiothoracic Intensive Care Unit (Surgical) – 4 weeks

Women’s Health Anesthesia @ Temple Women & Families – 4 weeks

OR Anesthesia Night Float – 6 weeks

Scholarly/Academic Time – 2 weeks

Vacation – 3 weeks

 

Cardiac Care Unit (Medical) – 4 weeks

Addiction Medicine – 2 weeks

Non-Anesthesiology Elective – 2 weeks

 

PGY-4

General OR Anesthesia – 4 weeks

Neuroanesthesia – 4 weeks

Thoracic Anesthesia – 4 weeks

Cardiac Anesthesia – 4 weeks

Perioperative Medicine – 4 weeks

Out of OR Anesthesia – 2 weeks

Regional Anesthesia – 4 weeks

Obstetric Anesthesia – 4 weeks

Obstetric Anesthesia Night Float – 2 weeks

Pediatric Anesthesia @ St. Christopher’s Hospital for Children – 4 weeks

Anesthesiology Electives – 8 weeks

General OR Night Float – 6 weeks

Scholarly/Academic Time – 2 weeks

Vacation – 3 weeks