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Application for Subspecialty Residency
At St.
John's Mercy, the traditional medical, surgical, and neurosurgical
intensive care units are combined into one multi-disciplinary
intensive care unit under the administration of the Critical
Care Medicine Department (CCM). During rotation through the
Intensive Care Unit (ICU), house officers from the internal
medicine, family medicine, transitional year, and obstetrics
and gynecology residencies work closely with the CCM subspecialty
residents and attending physicians.
In affiliation
with Saint Louis University School of Medicine, St. John's
Mercy Medical Center began a conjoint, internal medicine-based,
critical care medicine (CCM) subspecialty residency program
in 1979. The two year CCM Subspecialty Residency consists
of 19 months of structured core curriculum and five months
of elective time, which includes research.
The program
at Saint Louis University-St. John's Mercy Medical Center
is one of the largest CCM residencies in the country and attracts
applicants from all geographical areas. The CCM program educates
residents in all aspects of critical care, including clinical
patient management, ICU administration, critical care research,
and the resolution of ethical and economic problems that confront
the practicing intensivist on a daily basis. Formal lectures
are provided five times per week.
The core
curriculum of the residency is varied according to the fellow's
experience and base training. The curriculum includes rotations
through the pulmonary consult, the coronary, medical and surgical
ICUs at Saint Louis University Hospital, as well as rotations
through the multi-disciplinary ICU, nutrition support team,
respiratory care, and the Anesthesia Service at St. John's
Mercy Medical Center. The clinical ICU rotations emphasize
primary care responsibility. Elective time is available within
the departments of Medicine, Surgery, and Pediatrics at Saint
Louis University and/or St. John's Mercy Medical Center. Basic
and/or clinical research is also available during the second
year at both institutions. The program provides critical care
residents with a broad-based, multi-disciplinary approach
to the practice of critical care medicine.
Faculty
The full-time staff are base-trained in internal medicine
and all have had training in critical care medicine. The part-time
staff include physicians trained in pulmonary medicine, cardiology,
infectious disease, general surgery, cardiovascular surgery
and anesthesiology.
Christopher
Veremakis, MD
Chairman of the Department
of Critical Care Medicine
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Robert
W. Taylor, MD
Director of the Critical Care Medicine
Subspecialty Residency Training Program
at Saint Louis University
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Rakesh
Gupta, MD
George
M. Matuschak, MD
Joan
Shaffer, MD
Stephen
P. Taylor, MD
Steven
J. Trottier, MD
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