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Dear Cardiology Fellow: I would like to welcome you to the 2009-2010 UMDNJ-SOM / South Jersey Heart Group Cardiology Fellowship Program. We look forward to an exciting clinical and academic year. Enclosed you will find the cardiology fellowship manual. Please refer to it should you have any questions regarding any policies or procedures regarding the fellowship. Enclosed / attached are your rotation, lecture and office schedules as well. I need to make it perfectly clear that there are NO exceptions for missing weekly clinic hours. Your preceptor will discuss with you particular requirements that need to be fulfilled during this clinical time. Kate Jurman is the fellowship program coordinator. I need to express that you maintain communication with her. You’ll be expected to keep your contact information up to date with her including home, cell and pager numbers, as well as your preferred email addresses, as most program notifications come through the program coordinator. Please remember to check your e-mail on a daily basis, as it is the preferred method for reminders and updates. Our South Jersey Heart Group Website calendar is also a good source for updated information. Please remember to check it on a regular basis. Quarterly meetings and evaluations are held during the academic year. Evaluations include a thorough review of your logs and monthly service evaluations. This is also your quarterly forum for program feedback. Your research project will also be evaluated every quarter for appropriate progress. As you know, your scientific research project is an absolute requirement in order to graduate the program and receive your fellowship certificate. More information regarding the research project is available in this manual. The quarterly meeting is two-part: First, we have a general meeting including the program director, coordinator, chief fellow and all of the fellows; then, each fellow and chief fellow meets with the program director individually to discuss their progress. I am also available at any time you need to talk to me. Your procedure logs are one of the most important parts of your fellowship. Without them you cannot be credentialed at any level. Not only does the AOA require log submission but hospitals frequently require more than just a letter from the program director verifying your credentials. This year, all procedure logs will be completed using our New Innovation RMS, the same software suite used to log duty hours. You will note that in addition to your monthly schedule there are mandatory academic times to which you must adhere. Other than clinic hours, Thursday afternoons from 1:00pm until 5:00pm are designated academic time and must be attended. If you cannot attend for a valid reason, you must notify Kate or myself. As well, you will be expected to attend the cardiothoracic surgical morbidity and mortality meeting at Our Lady of Lourdes, Camden, usually held the second Thursday of every month from 7:30am until 9:00am in the 3rd floor Main conference room, and as well the cath lab peer review meetings held the first Friday of every month from 7:30am-8:30am in the 3rd floor cath lab film reading room. Both of these experiences are to help you understand the process that takes place during surgeries and caths as well as outcomes and procedures. Please be aware that dates and times of these conferences change often, please consult your monthly fellowship schedule for an exact date and time. One other important point that must be mentioned is that in all of your consults, admit notes and history and physicals you must address an OMT/ biomechanical examination and its relationship to cardiology. This must be performed in both review of systems as well as the physical exam and will be scrutinized heavily. The AOA is very strict regarding this evaluation. Lastly, there will be a year end examination to help us to identify the strengths and weaknesses of individual fellows as well as the program. The examination is designed to test your skills at your particular fellowship year. Although this is not a formally graded examination, it will be discussed with each of you individually and certainly your growth throughout the program will be monitored by these year-end exams. We look forward to an exciting year. As always, Kate and I are here to help you in anyway possible and look forward to starting the year! Sincerely, John N. Hamaty, D.O., FACC, FACOI Program Director 1 Introduction The administration, hospital staff and ancillary services would like to extend to you a warm welcome on the beginning of this new academic year at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey – School of Osteopathic Medicine (UMDNNJ-SOM) and South Jersey Heart Group (SJHG). We are proud of the fact that we are able to provide the best in medical care while maintaining a warm and friendly atmosphere of a small hospital environment. You will find our institution to be a comfortable learning environment while also being academically challenging. This manual is written with two intents in mind. First, we hope that it provides a means of orienting new fellows to the operations of the various departments at UMDNJ and SJHG and to ease your transition from your previous internal medicine residency training into cardiology fellowship training. Second, we hope that it provides a reasonable complete and precise guideline for you to use in your day to day activities at UMDNJ and SJHG. This manual is not meant to be a fixed and rigid document, but rather a flexible guide that can be changed and updated in the ever changing field of cardiology and improved upon based upon your input and of it’s various authors. The cardiology fellowship training program of the UMDNJ-SOM is an AOA approved three-year program designed to provide excellence in training in the diseases of the cardiovascular system. This manual provides the specific definitions, requirements and curriculum which governs the program. The manual will be updated on an annual basis as new and important issues such as new diagnostic and treatment modalities and new training requirements surface. Presently our program meets and exceeds the requirements of the basic standards for training in cardiology as developed by the ACOI and approved by the AOA. Intrinsic to the standards of training is an emphasis on the recommendations of the American College of Cardiology / American Heart Association / American College of Osteopathic Physicians / American College of Physicians recommendations as delineated in the COCATS documents. 2 Fellow’s Files / Required Elements A requirement of the program is a complete and updated fellow’s file which will include all of the required documents of the AOA and ACOI and other documents pertinent to the successful management of fellow training and processing issues. A complete file will promote a more complete record useful to the program and the fellows. Such items are needed for the fellow as he or she applies for staff privileges in ensuing years and items needed for mandatory ACOI compliance and inspections. Your fellowship documents / files are maintained by the program coordinator and updated on an as-needed basis. Post-fellowship, your records will be digitized and archived, and available for your credentialing needs. Required Elements: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. Completed UMDNJ-SOM OPTI Fellowship Application Three original letters of recommendation Current copies of all medical licensing Current copies of CDS / DEA Emergency Contact (Name, Telephone Number) Certificate of medical school graduation Copy of internship and residency training Medical School Transcripts Undergrad transcripts Copy of certificate of National Board Completion Documentation of active membership in the AOA / ACOI Current CV AOA / ACOI PROFESSIONAL DOCUMENTS American Osteopathic Association American College of Osteopathic Internists Included in this section is the most recent update of Basic Standards for Fellowship Training in Internal Medicine Subspecialties; Basic Standards for Residency Training in Cardiology; Basic Standards for Training in Clinical Cardiac Electrophysiology and Basic Standards for Residency Training in Interventional Cardiology as set forth by our governing bodies the American Osteopathic Association and the American College of Osteopathic Internists. If amendments and / or deletions of these basic standards or complete revisions occur at any time these will be provided to you immediately so that you can update your fellowship manual. For the 2008-2009 academic year we will also be including our Core Competency plan and workbook for our training program. Included is a full outline of all seven core competencies of the osteopathic profession which will give you a better understanding of the progression of the workbook and plan. This will be further discussed at orientation, and will be an ongoing part of your training and evaluation process throughout the academic year. 3 BASIC STANDARDS FOR FELLOWSHIP TRAINING IN INTERNAL MEDICINE SUBSPECIALTIES American Osteopathic Association and the American College of Osteopathic Internists Revised, BOT 2/2008 Subspecialty Basic Standards for Fellowship Training In Internal Medicine INTRODUCTION These are the basic standards for fellowship training in subspecialty internal medicine as established by the American College of Osteopathic Internists (ACOI) and approved by the American Osteopathic Association (AOA). These standards are designed to provide the osteopathic fellow with advanced and concentrated training in the subspecialties of internal medicine and to prepare the fellow for examination for certification in those subspecialties. STANDARD I – MISSION The mission of the subspecialty osteopathic internal medicine training program is to provide fellows with comprehensive structured cognitive and procedural clinical education in both inpatient and outpatient settings that will enable them to become competent, proficient and professional osteopathic subspecialty internists. STANDARD II – EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM GOALS All subspecialty osteopathic internal medicine programs must formulate goals that will allow the fellows to apply the following core competencies: A. Osteopathic Philosophy and Osteopathic Manipulative Medicine; B. Medical Knowledge; C. Patient Care; D. Interpersonal and Communication Skills; E. Professionalism; F. Practice-Based Learning and Improvement; G. Systems-Based Practice. STANDARD III- INSTITUTIONAL REQUIREMENTS A. In order to provide an osteopathic subspecialty training program, an institution must meet all the requirements of the AOA as formulated in the Basic Documents for Postdoctoral Training and must have an AOA approved and functioning program in internal medicine and the subspecialty. The number of fellows in the subspecialty training program may not exceed the number approved by the AOA. B. The institution must provide a sufficient patient load to properly train a minimum of two (2) fellows in the subspecialty. New programs must have a minimum of one approved position per training year to begin. Any program without functioning subspecialty fellows for three (3) consecutive years shall be considered lapsed in accordance with AOA policy. C. The institution’s department of internal medicine shall have at least one (1) physician certified in the appropriate subspecialty of internal medicine by the AOA and one other Basic Standards for Fellowship Training in Internal Medicine Subspecialties, physician certified in that subspecialty by the AOA or the American Board of Medical Specialties. One of the AOA-certified physicians shall be designated as the program director. Other qualified physicians participating in the training of fellows must submit their curricula vitae and must be approved by the program director. The program director shall be appointed for an appropriate period of time to assure program continuity. D. The institution must bear all direct and indirect costs of AOA on-site reviews and their preparation. E. The institution must comply with all the institutional requirements stipulated in the Basic Standards for Residency Training in Internal Medicine of the AOA and ACOI, including all of the following areas: 1. Sufficient resources for a quality training program; 2. Notification of the AOA and ACOI of any major change in leadership or governance; 3. Library resources; 4. Study and on-call facilities; 5. Supervised ambulatory site for continuity of care training; 6. Program description; 7. Written policy and procedures manual; 8. Fellow contracts; 9. Fellow certificates; 10. Work hours policy; 11. Fellow files; 12. Timely submission of required materials; 13. Affiliation agreements. STANDARD IV- PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS AND CONTENT A. The general educational content of the program must include: 4 1. The neuromuscular component of disease processes in the subspecialty. This component shall be provided in both clinical and didactic formats. 2. Development of basic cognitive skills and knowledge as pertaining to normal physiology and pathophysiology of body systems relevant to the subspecialty and the correlating clinical applications of medical diagnosis and management. 3. Opportunity throughout for exposure to issues the fellow will face as a practicing clinician, including health policy, managed care, health administration, medical ethics, medical liability and practice management. 4. A list of learning objectives to determine learning expectations at yearly training levels. 5. A formal didactic structure including journal clubs, morning reports, case conferences and other programs. Attendance at these meetings must be documented and faculty must participate in these meetings. This documentation must be made available during an on-site program review. 6. A written curriculum must be provided for all fellows. 7. The program shall provide adequate exposure to medical research/review skills and methods of presentation, including information related to changes in the health care delivery system. Documentation of research activities must be kept on file. Requirements for preparation and submission of medical manuscripts are listed in Appendix A. All fellows must complete one research project and submit an appropriate research paper during their subspecialty training. A fellow must describe the name and type of project planned on the first year resident annual report that is submitted to the ACOI. For all fellowships except those that are only one year in duration, if the planned project is a case project, it must be submitted to the ACOI six months prior to completion of the fellowship so the Council on Education and Evaluation can ensure that the quality of the report is acceptable according to the guidelines outlined in Appendix A. For fellowships that are only one year in duration, the case report may be submitted at the completion of the fellowship. If the planned project is a report of an original clinical research study, the fellows must submit this report by the completion of their training. 8. All programs must have a credentialing method in place that verifies competence in a procedure before allowing a fellow to perform that procedure independently. B. The specific educational content and program requirements for each subspecialty are attached and organized as follows: 1. Educational Program Duration. 2. Facilities and Resources. a. Description of specific resources required for the subspecialty. 3. Specific Program Content. a. Clinical requirements. b. Technical skills requirements. c. Ambulatory requirements. d. Specific program content for knowledge areas. 4. Specific Faculty Requirements C. At least 80% of the graduates of each AOA-approved subspecialty internal medicine fellowship program, averaged on a three year rolling basis, must take the subspecialty certifying examination of the American Osteopathic Board of Internal Medicine. STANDARD V- FACULTY AND ADMINISTRATION A. Program Director 1. The program director of the subspecialty fellowship programs shall possess the following qualifications: a. have practiced in the subspecialty for a minimum of three (3) years; b. be in active practice in the subspecialty. 2. The program director must attend the Annual ACOI Congress on Medical Education for Resident Trainers a minimum of every other year. Attendance must occur during the first year of appointment. It is also recommended that any physician anticipating appointment to the position of program director of a fellowship program attend the Congress prior to assuming the position. 3. The program director must comply with all the other requirements for program directors as described in the Basic Standards for Residency Training in Internal Medicine of the AOA and the ACOI. (Standard V.B.) B. Faculty Qualifications and Responsibilities 1. There must be at least two faculty members of the subspecialty participating in the training program, including the program director. Faculty must be either AOA- or ABIM-certified, or in the process of being certified. Faculty must be recertified in the subspecialty within the period specified by the certifying body. 2. Osteopathic faculty must teach the application of osteopathic principles and practice in the subspecialty. 3. Faculty must meet all the other requirements as listed in the Basic Standards for Residency Training of the AOA and ACOI. (Standard V.C.) STANDARD VI - FELLOW REQUIREMENTS A. Applicants for fellowship training in subspecialty internal medicine must: 1. Have graduated from an AOA-accredited college of osteopathic medicine. 2. Have completed an AOA-approved internal medicine residency program or an ACGME approved internal medicine program for which AOA approval has been ranted. 3. Be, and remain, a member of the AOA during fellowship training. 4. Be appropriately licensed in the state in which the training is conducted. B. During the training program all fellows must: 5 1. Submit a fellow annual report to the ACOI by July 31 of each calendar year.Final reports of fellows who complete the program in months other than June must be submitted within thirty (30) days of completion of the training year. Failure to submit the annual report to the American College ofOsteopathic Internists: • within sixty (60) days of the required date will result in the assessment of a $100 late fee for review of the training year; • within one (1) year of the required date will result in the assessment of a $500 late fee for review of the training year; and • there will be a $250 late fee for review of each additional fellowship year that is delinquent for one or more years. If, by completion of the program, all of the annual reports are incomplete, the ACOI Council on Education and Evaluation may require that the fellow repeat training. 2. Attend a minimum of 70% of all educational meetings as directed by the program director. Fellows must also participate in appropriate professional staff activities such as tumor boards, mortality review, quality assurance, critical care committees, pharmacy and therapeutics, infection control and clinical pathologic conferences, and they must participate in institutional resident/intern/student education. 3. Participate in a research component as indicated in Standard IV.A.7. 4. Complete a service evaluation after each rotational assignment. 5. Maintain a procedures log of all required procedures with a copy to be kept in the Department of Medical Education. Although not required by the ACOI, it is strongly recommended that in addition to the file copy of the procedures log, each fellow maintain a permanent copy of all logs and annual reports for use in future privilege requests. 6. Participate in an annual evaluation of program goals and curriculum. 7. Maintain ambulatory continuity logs. 8. Maintain a current e-mail address and provide it to the ACOI upon entering the program. 9. Function in an ethical and professional manner. STANDARD VII- EVALUATION A. Each subspecialty internal medicine fellowship program must conform to the standards for evaluation as described in the Basic Standards for Residency Training in Internal Medicine of the AOA and the ACOI. APPENDIX A Requirements for Preparation and Submission of Medical Manuscripts, Research Papers and Progress Reports A. All manuscripts must be typed and submitted in an appropriate format acceptable for publication in a standard scientific refereed journal. B. An abstract must accompany each manuscript. The cover sheet must list the program for which credit is to be applied and a statement that the fellow is the primary author, or performed substantive participation in the study and that the paper has been reviewed and approved. This must be signed and attested to by the program director. Manuscripts shall be submitted in one of the following formats only: 1. A case presentation of a first reported case or other unusual manifestations of a disease which will add to the medical literature, which should include a review of the literature and discussion (acceptable only if submitted for publication). 2. A report of an original clinical research study approved by the program director and the institutional review board. 3. A case presentation and discussion which challenges existing concepts of diagnosis or treatment and thus recommends further investigation. Initially, the fellow should submit a written proposal to the program director for review and approval as fulfilling the writing requirement. All projects must be performed and prepared under the supervision of the program director or another physician approved by the program director. Completed manuscripts must be submitted to the ACOI as described in Standard IV.A.7. 6 MEDICAL WRITING AND RESEARCH COVER SHEET This medical writing and research paper entitled: ______________________________________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________________________________ is being submitted/in progress by: __________________________________________________________________________, DO (Name of fellow) ______________________________________________________________________________ (Training institution) for the ____________________________ program, training dates __________ to __________ (Program type, e.g. cardiology, GI, etc.) __________________________________________________________, DO ______________ (Signature of fellow) (date) __________________________________________________________,DO/MD ____________ (Signature of program director) (date) The above signatures attest to the fact that the attached work has been performed by the fellow noted, and has been reviewed and approved by the program director. 7 BASIC STANDARDS FOR RESIDENCY TRAINING IN CARDIOLOGY American Osteopathic Association and the American College of Osteopathic Internists Specific Requirements For Osteopathic Subspecialty Training In Cardiology This is part of the Basic Standards for Fellowship Training in Internal Medicine Subspecialties, which govern and define training in the subspecialties. The Basic Standards are incorporated into this document by reference. I. Education Program - The residency training program in cardiology shall be three (3) years in duration and shall provide supervised clinical experience and didactic programs to enable the resident to develop sufficient skills and knowledge in the performance and interpretation of cardiovascular diagnostic modalities, and in thecare of patients with cardiovascular diagnoses. II. Facilities and Resources A. Inpatient and outpatient facilities with an appropriate number of patients of a wide age range and a broad variety of cardiovascular disorders; B. Laboratories for cardiac catheterization, electrocardiography, exercise and pharmacologic stress testing, Doppler transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiography and ambulatory ECG monitoring; C. Facilities for nuclear cardiology, including ventricular function assessment, myocardial perfusion imaging and the study of myocardial viability; D. Facilities for management of patients with arrhythmias, including electrophysiologic testing, arrhythmia ablation, signal averaged ECGT and tilt table testing as well as the evaluation of patients for pacemakers and implantation of pacemakers and automatic defibrillators; E. Faculty and resources for clinical research; F. Modern intensive care facilities; G. Surgical program for all cardiac procedures and surgical intensive care services; H. Facilities for assessment of peripheral vascular disease, pulmonary function and cardiovascular radiology; I. Faculty and program for diagnosis and follow-up care of patients with congenital heart disease; J. Faculty and facilities involved in the instruction of preventive cardiology, risk factor modification, management of lipid disorders and cardiac rehabilitation; K. Access to comprehensive library facilities; L. Ambulatory clinic facilities where the trainee will follow an independent panel of patients for a minimum of one-half day per week on a continuity basis for the entire 36 month program. III. Specific Program Content A. Integration of Osteopathic Principles and practice in the treatment of patients with cardiovascular disorders; B. A core curriculum in the basic medical sciences of cardiovascular medicine, to include physiology, anatomy, histology and pharmacology; C. A clinical sciences curriculum that shall include formal, regularly scheduled lectures, cardiac catheterization conference, mortality and morbidity review and literature review. Teaching rounds must be conducted in a regular and organized fashion; D. There shall be Training in the principles of operation and function, indication, limitation, risk vs. benefit ratio and cost effectiveness of the various technical procedures used in the diagnosis, therapy and management of cardiovascular disorders; E. Procedural Training Procedural training shall adhere to the guidelines established by the Core Cardiology Training Symposium (COCATS) as approved by the American College of Cardiology: Level 1: Basic level of training required of all trainees to be competent as consulting cardiologists; Level 2: Additional training in one or more specialized areas enabling a cardiologist to perform or interpret specific procedures at an intermediate skill level; Level 3: Advanced training in a specialized area enabling a cardiologist to perform, interpret and train others to perform and interpret specific procedures at a high skill level. 1. Level 1 training shall be achieved in all areas by all trainees; 2. Level 2 training shall be required of all trainees intending to achieve primary operator status in the areas of cardiac catheterization, echocardiography and nuclear cardiology; 3. Level 3 training shall be offered based on faculty and facilities for any or all of the above areas of expertise; 4. Training and attainment of competency in electrophysiology and interventional cardiology may not be accomplished during the 36 month cardiology fellowship. This may be accomplished by separate programs requiring 12 months of additional training in the area of interest; 5. Rotational requirements include a minimum of: Eight (8) months clinical non-laboratory practice activity with a minimum of three (3) months in the CCU/ICU; Four (4) months of echocardiography; Four (4) months or a minimum of 100 cases in the cardiac catheterization laboratory; 8 Two (2) months in electrophysiology and pacemaker service; Four (4) months of ECG, Stress Testing, Holter interpretation and various stress modalities; The remaining 12 months shall include exposure to pediatric cardiology, transplant cardiology and other areas of interest as determined by the Program Director. F. Specific Rotation Requirements 1. Clinical Cardiology Clinical cardiology must encompass a broad range of cardiac disease states. The trainees must spend a minimum of eight months in clinical cardiology. This experience must include daily inpatient management of cardiovascular diseases and cardiology consultation. At least three of these months must be spent by the trainee in the coronary care unit or the intensive care unit during the trainee’s 36-month program. If the trainee has extensive coronary care unit experience from his/her internal medicine residency, then this requirement can be met by ongoing patient interaction in the CCU supervising medical residents over the three-year period. Either alternative must enable the trainee to gain exposure to hemodynamic monitoring, postoperative patient care, as well as other aspects of critical/acute care cardiology; i.e.: myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, postoperative coronary artery bypass grafting and transplant. 2. Cardiac Catheterization and Interventional Cardiology A minimum of four months in cardiac catheterization must be spent by the trainee, or exposure to a minimum of 100 cases. During this time, the trainee must gain exposure to valvular hemodynamics, right and left cardiac catheterization and limited exposure to interventional cardiology. The trainee must participate in a minimum of 300 left heart catheterizations as primary operator to achieve Level II proficiency. The trainee must also maintain a procedure log for accurate documentation. Level II trainees must also perform at least 10 intraaortic balloon pumps during the 36-month training period. 3. Non-Invasive Testing a. Exercise Stress Testing, Electrocardiography and Nuclear Cardiology The trainee must spend at least two months in the exercise testing facility. As an alternative, this may be incorporated into other rotations, such as heart station or noninvasive. This is to expose the trainee to all types of exercise testing. The trainee at the end of his/her time, By completion of the fellowship, the trainee must be capable of performing and interpreting the electrocardiographic portion of the treadmill and pharmacological testing. The trainee must also be competent in the test protocols and the appropriateness of ordering tests. A minimum interpretation of 150 exercise tests should be performed. Dobutamine and stress echocardiography requirements are in addition to this. Interpretation of standard 12-lead electrocardiograms should be incorporated in the entire 36-month training period. In order for the trainee to become proficient in interpretation and gain exposure to a wide variety of ECG abnormalities, it is recommended that a minimum of 3,500 studies be reviewed. 4. Echocardiography a. The trainee must spend a minimum of four months in the echocardiography lab. As an alternative, this maybe incorporated in other rotations such as heart station or noninvasive. During this time, the trainee will gain exposure in performing and interpreting 2 D and M Mode echocardiography and cardiac Doppler. A minimum of 300 studies must be interpreted to obtain Level II proficiency in echocardiography. These studies must include a wide variety of cardiac abnormalities, such as valvular heart disease, endocarditis, prosthetic valve evaluation, myocardial ischemia, primary and secondary diseases of the heart, pericardial disease and diseases of the great vessels. b. The trainee must have attained proficiency in standard 2 D and M Mode echocardiography and cardiac Doppler prior to or parallel with obtaining expertise in transesophageal echocardiography. A minimum of 25 intubations supervised by an experience transesophageal echocardiographer, as well as performing 50 transesophageal echocardiographs are necessary to achieve proficiency in this area. c. The trainee must obtain proficiency in standard echocardiography prior to or parallel with obtaining proficiency in stress echocardiography and dobutamine echocardiography. A minimum of 100 stress/dobutamine echocardiographic studies are recommended for proficiency in this area. 5. Nuclear Medicine Individuals wishing certification in nuclear medicine/nuclear cardiology require special training. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) has set specific guidelines for licensure in this field. Trainees interesting in obtaining licensure must adhere to these guidelines. 6. Electrophysiology The trainee must have a minimum of two months of electrophysiological exposure. During this time, the trainee must gain exposure to the appropriateness of electrophysiological studies, interpretation of basic electrophysiological studies, technique involved, indication for pharmacological and non pharmacological management of arrhythmias and indications for temporary and permanent pacemakers. A minimum of 10 temporary transvenous pacemakers should be inserted during the 36-month training period, as well as a minimum of eight elective cardioversions in the 36-month training period. Exposure to permanent pacemaker insertion must be available to cardiovascular trainees. A minimum of 50 permanent pacemaker implantations must be performed. The ability for the trainee to participate in pacemaker follow-up is mandatory for those performing pacemaker implantation. One hundred (100) pacemaker follow-up visits must be performed. The pacemaker clinic must allow the trainee to gain experience in a variety of pacemaker programmers, as well as pacemaker follow-up and management. 7. A model rotation schedule for the three year general cardiology fellowship is posted on the ACOI website (www.acoi.org). G. Ambulatory Clinical Experience 9 Ongoing outpatient clinical experience is mandatory for all cardiovascular trainees. At least one-half day per week in an outpatient setting with appropriate supervision throughout the 36-month period must be provided. This will allow the cardiovascular trainee to gain experience and exposure in the management of cardiovascular problems in the outpatient setting. H. Elective Time 1. Four months elective time should be allotted to the trainee to pursue special interest in other fields of cardiology; i.e., Adult Congenital Disease, Lipid Management, Preventive Cardiology, Transplant/Cardiomyopathy, or to allow extra time in areas in which the trainee may be deficient. 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 Seven Core Competencies of the Osteopathic Profession Throughout your training, you have undoubtedly heard, and will, without question, continue to hear about the seven core competencies of the osteopathic profession. Please familiarize yourself with these very basic tenets of training, as they are the fundamental basis of all fellowship evaluations. All fellow case presentations must reflect all seven core competencies; each monthly fellow evaluation of service addresses each competency, and the fellow is evaluated on each competency during every rotation, etc. The following section fully explains each of the seven core competencies; also, attached is our fellowship core competency workbook / plan. If you have any comments, questions or concerns on how these competencies will be fulfilled during your training, please consult this section of the manual, or ask your program coordinator . Osteopathic Philosophy and Osteopathic Manipulative Medicine Medical Knowledge Patient Care Interpersonal and Communication Skills Professionalism Practice-Based Learning and Improvement Systems-Based Practice Competency 1: OSTEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY /OSTEOPATHIC MANIPULATIVE MEDICINE DEFINITION: Residents are expected to demonstrate and apply knowledge of accepted standards in Osteopathic Manipulative Treatment (OMT) appropriate to their specialty. The educational goal is to train a skilled and competent osteopathic practitioner who remains dedicated to life-long learning and to practice habits in osteopathic philosophy and manipulative medicine. REQUIRED ELEMENTS: 1. Demonstrate competency in the understanding and application of OMT appropriate to the medical specialty. 2. Integrate Osteopathic Concepts and OMT into the medical care provided to patients as appropriate. 3. Understand and integrate Osteopathic Principles and Philosophy into all clinical and patient care activities. Competency 2: MEDICAL KNOWLEDGE DEFINITION: Residents are expected to demonstrate and apply knowledge of accepted standards of clinical medicine in their respective specialty area, remain current with new developments in medicine, and participate in life-long learning activities, including research. REQUIRED ELEMENTS: 1. Demonstrate competency in the understanding and application of clinical medicine to patient care. Competency 3: PATIENT CARE DEFINITION: Residents must demonstrate the ability to effectively treat patients, provide medical care that incorporates the osteopathic philosophy, patient empathy, awareness of behavioral issues, the incorporation of preventive medicine, and health promotion. REQUIRED ELEMENTS: 1. Gather accurate, essential information for all sources, including medical interviews, physical examinations, medical records, and diagnostic/therapeutic plans and treatments. 2. Validate competency in the performance of diagnosis, treatment and procedures appropriate to the medical specialty. 29 3. Provide health care services consistent with osteopathic philosophy, including preventative medicine and health promotion that are based on current scientific evidence. Competency 4: INTERPERSONAL AND COMMUNICATION SKILLS DEFINITION: Residents are expected to demonstrate interpersonal and communication skills that enable them to establish and maintain professional relationships with patients, families, and other members of health care teams. REQUIRED ELEMENTS: 1. Demonstrate effectiveness in developing appropriate doctor-patient relationships. 2. Exhibit effective listening, written and oral communication skills in professional interactions with patients, families and other health professionals. Competency 5: PROFESSIONALISM DEFINITION: Residents are expected to uphold the Osteopathic Oath in the conduct of their professional activities that promote advocacy of patient welfare, adherence to ethical principles, collaboration with health professionals, life-long learning, and sensitivity to a diverse patient population. Residents should be cognizant of their own physical and mental health in order to effectively care for patients. REQUIRED ELEMENTS: 1. Demonstrate respect for patients and families and advocate for the primacy of patient’s welfare and autonomy. 2. Adhere to ethical principles in the practice of medicine. 3. Demonstrate awareness and proper attention to issues of culture, religion, age, gender, sexual orientation, and mental and physical disabilities. Competency 6: PRACTICE-BASED LEARNING AND IMPROVEMENT DEFINITION: Residents must demonstrate the ability to critically evaluate their methods of clinical practice, integrate evidence-based medicine into patient care, show an understanding of research methods, and improve patient care practices. REQUIRED ELEMENTS: 1. Treat patients in a manner consistent with the most up-to-date information on diagnostic and therapeutic effectiveness. 2. Perform self-evaluations of clinical practice patterns and practice-based improvement activities using a systematic methodology. Competency 7: SYSTEMS-BASED PRACTICE DEFINITION: Residents are expected to demonstrate an understanding of health care delivery systems, provide effective and qualitative patient care within the system, and practice cost-effective medicine. REQUIRED ELEMENTS: 1. Understand national and local health care delivery systems and how they impact on patient care and professional practice. 2. Advocate for quality health care on behalf of patients and assist them in their interactions with the complexities of the medical system. 30 Core Competencies Workbook A. How are you implementing training in the seven Core Competencies? List objectives and expectations for each below or on an attached separate sheet: 1. Osteopathic Philosophy/Osteopathic Manipulative Medicine Fellows are being trained in osteopathic philosophy and osteopathic manipulative medicine via a DVD-ROM education series, in addition to monthly didactic lecture. The objective is that they demonstrate competency in his/her understanding and application of OMT. Department of Cardiology Fellows are expected to: 1. Integrate osteopathic concepts and OMT into patient care as appropriate; and, that they and understand and integrate osteopathic principles and philosophy into clinical and patient care activities as appropriate. 2. Medical Knowledge All fellows will receive comprehensive training in echocardiography, nuclear medicine and electrophysiology as part of the three-year program. Morbidity and mortality conferences are held once a month to review missed information, inappropriate management, technical errors, etc.. Fellows present structured critical appraisals of articles verbally s part of their journal club responsibilities. Preparation for patient care. The fellows are encouraged to present research papers at a variety of scientific meetings. Self directed learning. Feedback from attending physicians and faculty. Core and curriculum conferences. Information obtained from literature search, Braunwald club, Journal club is then applied to their patient population and monitored by their attending supervisor and program director. Fellows must demonstrate knowledge about established and evolving biomedical, clinical and cognate (e.g. epidemiological and sociobehavioral) sciences and the application of this knowledge to patient care. Department of Cardiology Fellows are expected to: 1. Demonstrate an investigatory and analytic thinking approach to clinical situations 2. Know and apply the basic clinically supportive sciences which are appropriate to the cardiovascular discipline. 3. Analyze practice experience and perform practice-based improvement activities using a systematic methodology. 4. Locate, appraise, and assimilate evidence from scientific studies related to their patient’s health problems. 5. Obtain and use information about their own population of patients and the larger population from which their patients are drawn. 6. Apply knowledge of study designs and statistical methods to the appraisal of clinical studies and other information on diagnostic and therapeutic effectiveness. 7. Use information technology to manage information, access on-line medical information; and support their own education. 8. Facilitate the learning of students and other healthcare professionals. 3. Patient Care Training includes daily opportunities to practice and improve interpersonal and communication skills interacting with patients, patient’s families and health care staff. Training also includes daily opportunities to communicate with patients about their diagnosis and treatment plans. Daily opportunities to develop a professional approach while interacting with patients and healthcare staff in the OR, on the floor and in ambulatory facilities. Morbidity and Mortality conferences are held monthly to review missed information, inappropriate management, technical errors etc. Fellows have access to the internet which enables their medical education and provides information relevant to patient care. Information obtained from literature search, Braunwald club, Journal Club etc., is then applied to their patient population and monitored by attending physicians and faculty. Fellows must be able to provide patient care that is compassionate, appropriate, and effective for the treatment of health problems and the promotion of health. Department of Cardiology Fellows are expected to: 1. Communicate effectively and demonstrate caring and respectful behaviors when interacting with patients and their families. 2. Gather essential and accurate information about their patients. 3. Make informed decisions about diagnostic and therapeutic intervention based on patient information and preferences, up-to-date scientific evidence, and clinical judgment. 4. Develop and carry out patient management plans. 5. Counsel and educate patients and their families as appropriate. 6. Use information technology to support patient care decisions and patient education. 31 7. Perform competently all medical and invasive and non-invasive procedures considered to be essential for the area of practice. 8. Provide health care services aimed health problems or at maintaining health. 9. Work with health care professionals, including those from other disciplines, to provide patient-focused care. 4. Interpersonal and Communication Skills Fellows observe attending physicians and faculty interacting with patients on a daily basis. Training includes daily opportunities to practice and improve interpersonal skills and interacting patients and healthcare staff; daily opportunities to develop professional, ethical, and humanistic approach while interacting with patients and health care staff; daily opportunities to communicate about patients by writing in patient charts. Fellows must be able to demonstrate interpersonal and communication skills that result in effective information exchange and teaming with patients, their families and professional associates. Department of Cardiology Fellows are expected to: 1. Create and sustain a therapeutic and ethically sound relationship with patients. 2. Use effective listening skills and elicit and provide information using effective nonverbal, explanatory, questioning and writing skills. 3. Work effectively with others as a member or leader of a health care team or other professional group. 5. Professionalism All fellows will receive training in the form of didactic lecture and seminar in medical ethics. Professionalism is modeled by attending physicians, faculty, chief fellows, nurses, preceptors, etc. Training includes daily opportunities to develop a professional and ethical approach while interacting with patients and healthcare staff in the OR, on the floor and in ambulatory facilities. Faculty and attending physicians discuss issues related to gender, culture, age and disability when in the clinical setting. Fellows must demonstrate a commitment to carrying out professional responsibilities, adherence to ethical principles, and sensitivity to a diverse patient population Department of Cardiology Fellows are expected to: 1. Demonstrate respect, compassion, and integrity; a responsiveness to the needs of patients and society that supersedes self-interest; accountability to patients and society, and the profession; and a commitment to excellence and on-going professional development. 2. Demonstrate a commitment to ethical principles pertaining to provision or withholding of critical care, confidentiality of patient information, informed consent, and business practices. 3. Demonstrate sensitivity and responsiveness to patients’ culture, age, gender and disabilities. 6. Practice Based Learning and Improvement Morbidity and mortality conferences are held once a month to review missed information, inappropriate management, technical errors, etc. Preparation for and participation in evidence based Journal Club. Fellows present structured critical appraisals verbally as part of their journal club responsibilities. Preparation for patient care. The fellows are encouraged to present research papers at a variety of scientific meetings. Monthly journal clubs are used as an avenue to discuss research design and statistical analysis. Didactic lectures by faculty and attending physicians and visiting professionals. Self-directed learning. Feedback from attending physicians and faculty. Fellows must be able to investigate and evaluate their patient care practices, appraise and assimilate scientific evidence, and improve their patient care practices. Department of Cardiology Fellows are expected to: 1. Analyze practice experience and perform practice-based improvement activities using systematic methodology. 2. Locate, appraise, and assimilate evidence from scientific studies related to their patients health problems 3. Obtain and use information about their own population of patients and the larger population from which their patients are drawn. 4. Apply knowledge of study designs and statistical methods to the appraisal of clinical studies and other information on diagnostic and therapeutic effectiveness. 5. Use information technology to manage information, access online medical information and support their own education. 6. Facilitate the learning of student and other healthcare professionals 7. System Based Practice Competencies These issues are discussed in Fellow didactics to create awareness of cost without reducing quality of patient care. Faculty and attending physicians serving as role models afford an opportunity for fellows to witness cost effective healthcare in practice. Fellows regularly deal with a multi-system, multi-task health care arena that provides them ample opportunities, if sought after, with understanding the component of well thought out patient management and efficient health care delivery system with effective cost management and quality medical care. Daily opportunities to be a patient advocate and provide information and coordination to the patient for his and her own understanding and ability to deal with the multifaceted and sometimes problematic dealings with health care managers and third party 32 providers. Fellows must demonstrate knowledge about established and evolving biomedical, clinical and cognate (e.g. epidemiological and sociobehavioral ) sciences and the application of this knowledge o patient care. Department of Cardiology Fellows are expected to: 1. Demonstrate an investigatory and analytic thinking approach to clinical situations. 2. Know and apply the basic and clinically supportive sciences which are appropriate to the cardiovascular discipline. 3. Analyze practice experience and perform practice based improvement activities using a systematic methodology. 4. Locate, appraise and assimilate evidence from scientific studies related to their patient’s health problems. 5. Obtain and use information about their own population of patients and the larger population from which their patients are drawn. 6. Apply knowledge of study designs and statistical methods to the appraisal of clinical studies and other information on diagnostic and therapeutic effectiveness. 7. Use information technology to manage information, access online medical information; and support their own education. 8. Facilitate the learning of other students and fellows and other healthcare professionals. B. How are you evaluating each resident/ fellow? Each fellow will be evaluated for his or her performance at the completion of each month of training by the trainer of that service. Fellows are further evaluated bi-annually at the completion of an individual case presentation. Each of the core competencies is addressed in this evaluation. Evaluations that fall out of the expected performance levels will be addressed on a case-by-case basis and may be prompt specific remedies as determined by the program director. The evaluations are meant as a tool to be used for the director and fellow to follow his or her progress of learning. A new 360 degree evaluation will be used beginning academic year 2006-2007. It will consist of the fellow(s) being evaluated by persons with whom they work. Patients, nurses and fellow housestaff will complete these evaluations. They will be given unannounced. The evaluations of the program are due at the end of each rotation. Failure to comply will result in a meeting with the director. Further delays will result in corrective action at the discretion of the program director. Form Currently Used: Attachment A ; 360 degree evaluation forms C. How is each resident/fellow evaluating each rotation and the teaching faculty, resident(s) and fellow(s) on that rotation? Each fellow will provide feedback in the form of a formal evaluation form that critiques the teaching and training he/she is receiving. Honest evaluation in this area is helpful in improving the quality of the training that this program can offer. Evaluations should be completed in a timely fashion. Form currently used: Attachment B D. Beginning with the end of the 2005-2006 academic year, the program director must complete an AOA Program Director’s Annual Evaluation Report every year for each intern, resident and fellow in their program. The last page of the Annual Report is to be completed only for housestaff in the final year of their program. We must have copies of this report for the trainees file. Appendix E has been completed and submitted to UMDNJ-SOM /GME prior to the completion of this report; copies of which are attached hereto. E. How are you presenting core competencies in your orientation program for new housestaff? All housestaff new to the system are required to attend part of the Internship Orientation which includes Core Competencies Orientation. In other words, GME already reviews the core competencies with out of system housestaff coming into your programs as part of the Internship Orientation program. We will only need to know how you will cover the competencies with someone coming from another program mid year. (Very rare.) Core competencies are addressed in detail in our program manual and are 1) updated annually and distributed to all fellows at orientation. F. What two methods of assessment are you using to evaluate the housestaff on core competencies? Fellows bi-annual evaluations and 360 degree evaluations; Monthly service rotation evaluations (Attachment A); Faculty supervisors evaluate the application of fellows knowledge daily as they supervise them in both in and outpatient settings as well as ambulatory clinic settings; Competency will be evidenced through journal club activities and research paper activity; Faculty and attending physicians monitor fellows understanding of core competencies and how it directly affects the overall patient care system; Fellows are evaluated bi-annually at the completion of a case-presentation at which all 7 core competencies must be addressed. Core competency areas are evaluated annually as part of the fellow’s end of year comprehensive examination. Attachments: Attachment A, adapted for Dept. of Cardiology, Attachment B, adapted for Dept. of Cardiology Appendix E, completed for 2005-2006 Dept. of Cardiology Fellows 33 Submitted 06/30/2009 ___________________________________ John N. Hamaty, D.O. FACC, FACCOI, Program Director General Program Description Overview The three-year osteopathic cardiology fellowship training program at UMDNJ-SOM is an AOA approved program that provides comprehensive training in cardiovascular diseases with exposure to all facets of cardiology. Satisfactory completion of this program will provide American Osteopathic Board of Internal Medicine (AOBIM) eligibility, leading to Board certification. Eligible physicians for enrollment in this program must be graduates of an AOA accredited medical school who have satisfactorily completed and osteopathic internship, atleast two years of an AOA approved Internal medicine residency, or three years of an “alternative pathway” internal medicine residency. Osteopathic physicians completing allopathic residencies may seek retroactive AOA approval as set by the AOA guidelines. All fellows will receive comprehensive training in echocardiography, nuclear medicine and electrophysiology as part of the threeyear program. Fulfillment of the recommendations of the ACC for adult cardiology training is expected upon successful completion of this program. Program Philosophy The UMDNJ-SOM program is deeply committed to providing the best training in cardiovascular disease possible. A standard of excellence is achieved and maintained by strictly adhering to and complying with AOA / ACOI Basic Standards of Residency Training in Cardiology which is based upon the standards and recommendations of the American College of Cardiology. The program will be closely maintained by review, audit and input from the program director, attending physicians and fellows. General Description The basic cardiology fellowship program is an AOA approved program that upon satisfactory completion will provide board eligibility by the AOBIM in cardiovascular diseases. This is a well rounded adult cardiology training program that promotes excellence in the field of cardiovascular diseases. Graduates will secure exceptional exposure in this field that should more than further satisfy additional credentialing in pursued hospital privileges and professional societies. Training Tracks This program will offer two tracks of training, a non-invasive clinical cardiology track and an invasive/non-invasive track leading to independent operator status in diagnostic heart catheterization and angiography. Additionally, training in the invasive track will satisfy the pre-requisites needed for further training in interventional cardiology should the trainee elect to pursue it and both tracks provide the pre-requisites for further training in non-invasive or electrophysiology training. Non-Invasive Track 9 Months clinical cardiology 5 Months cardiac/surgical/intensive care 8 Months nuclear cardiology/ECG/Stress testing 6 Months echocardiography 4 Months cardiac cath lab 2 Months electrophysiology 2 Months electives (Includes vacation and nuclear certification) Invasive Track 8 Months clinical cardiology 5 Months cardiac/surgical/intensive care 4 Months nuclear cardiology/ECG/Stress testing 6 Month echocardiography 10 Months cardiac cath lab 2 Months electrophysiology 1 Month elective (Includes vacation and nuclear certification) Satisfactory completion of the non-invasive track can lead to level two (independent operator status) expertise in echocardiography and satisfy pre-requisites for licensing in nuclear medicine. Satisfactory completion of the invasive track can lead to independent operator status in cardiac catheterization and angiography, and level two expertise (independent operator status) in echocardiography.) Requirements for Completion All fellows must have successfully completed all the academic requirements as outlined in this document and as specified in the requirements for training by the AOA. Additionally, the fellow must maintain completion and submission of an acceptable fellow research paper. The fellow is expected to maintain the proper decorum and professionalism expected of a physician, that is, no outstanding disciplinary issues, violations as indicated in this document must be breached. Fellow Performance Evaluation (Monthly Rotation) / Core Competency Attachment A Fellow Evaluation of Service (Monthly Rotation) / Core Competency Attachment B 34 Each fellow will be evaluated for his or her performance at the completion of each month of training by the trainer of that service. Evaluations that fall out of the expected performance levels will be addressed on a case by case basis and may prompt specific remedies as determined by the program director. The evaluations are meant as a tool to be used for the program director and fellow to follow his or her progress of learning through the program. Fellows will also be evaluated annually via a 360 degree evaluation. This evaluation consists of evaluations being done by the people you work with and for. Patients, peers, and support staff will complete these evaluations in addition to attending physicians. They will be given unannounced and the results of which will be discussed with the fellow at the following quarterly evaluation. Monthly evaluations of service are due at the end of each month and are to be turned in to your program coordinator. Failure to comply may result in a meeting with the program director. Further delays will result in corrective action at the discretion of the program director. Likewise, each fellow will provide feedback in the form of a formal evaluation form that critiques the teaching and training he/she is receiving. Honest evaluations in this area are helpful in improving the quality of training that this program can offer. Evaluations musts be completed promptly at the end of each rotation along with the attending rotation evaluation. Procedure Logs / Tracking Protocol It is critically important for satisfactory completion of cardiology fellowship training and for further considerations of staff privileges in hospitals where fellows may practice that an accurate record of required procedures be maintained. It is also and AOA/ACOI requirement that certain procedures (as listed in the Annual Resident Report) are logged and submitted annually. All required clinical procedures that are part of training requirements are maintained by the program coordinator for quantifying and record keeping purposes. Logs are collected and reviewed on a quarterly basis. (Due two/three weeks prior to quarterly evaluations) Beginning July 1st, 2008 all procedure logs will be done utilizing New Innovations RMS software, much like duty hours are logged. Your logs must be accurate, complete and on time. A record of all procedures will be part of your permanent record and will be used for future inquiries from hospitals and professional societies to which you wish to apply. The following procedures require logs: Nuclear Stress Testing Echocardiography /Echo Stress Testing Transesophageal echocardiography / Intubations Cardiac Catheterization / Conscious Sedation Office Patients (Specify New Pt. Vs. Follow-up) Inpatient Consults / Continuity Log EP (tvp/ permanent pacer placement, cardioversion) Also recommended: Special Procedure Log: Pulls and insertions, Swans, etc. Cardiovascular disease training requires excellence in several laboratory skills and proper exposure and documentation is critical to the eventual credentialing in order to perform these skills as an adult cardiologist. Careful, comprehensive maintenance of a procedure log is a necessity and represents the fellow’s record when applying for future privileges in their hospitals of practice. The log forms used by the fellowship are contained herein and it is a program requirement that is updated quarterly. Failure to properly document any procedures can result in a loss of credit for these procedures and could significantly impact on the fellow’s future privileges and ability to graduate from the fellowship. Duty Hours: All cardiology fellows are required to log their duty hours on New Innovations. Hours can be logged at any time during the month, and must be complete by 4:00pm on the last day of the month. It is necessary to log all duty types accurately, i.e., rotation / office hours / education session as well as the correct location. Your NI duty hours are used by multiple institutions for tracking work hour policy compliance as well as for Medicaid and medicare billing purposes. Conferences / Lectures / Didactic Functions It is expected that the fellow attend as many of the offered didactic conferences that he/she can in order to be exposed to the academic that our program has to offer. While not all fellows will be able to attend all after hour dinners, lectures, conferences etc., it is expected that a concerted effort be made to attend as many functions as possible within reason. There are, however, some didactic functions which require mandatory attendance. For these functions, you will receive advance notice. A monthly Journal club is held at the South Jersey Heart Group office in Cherry Hill. You can find the monthly articles for Journal club on the SJHG website. Each fellow will present an article in detail including statistical relevance, practice applications and an appropriate critique. Journal club articles must be submitted in PDF format to the chief fellow not later than the 3 rd or 4th of each month. Journal club is held on the third Wednesday of every month. Braunwald club is a fellow driven series designed to enhance your learning. This is in preparation for cardiovascular boards. The schedule for Braunwald is posted on the SJHG website calendar. Braunwald club is routinely held in the SJHG Cherry Hill office. 35 A monthly ECG conference is held during our weekly Thursday lecture series. Strips are made available for review in advance on our sjhg website, and following the monthly conference, answers and additional ECG training information can also be found on the website. This conference is also fellow driven and led by Dr. Siegal. Academic Lecture Program Every Thursday your academic time is from 1pm-5pm. During these times your formal academic lectures will be given by the attending staff and visiting lecturers. You will also participate by giving several formal, well-researched case presentations. Your case presentations will address all 7 core competencies and be evaluated on those same core competencies by an attending faculty member. Lecture topics include, but are not limited to cath, echo, case review and a broad range of other topics geared toward making this a well rounded academic experience. Unless otherwise noted, lecture begins PROMPTLY at 1:00pm in the SJHG Cherry Hill office and attendance is mandatory. If you are unable to attend lecture for any reason, please notify the program director or program coordinator in advance. Fellow Case Presentation The object of the case presentation is to pick a topic for you to learn and master. I strongly encourage basic cardiovascular disease states such as valvular heart disease, coronary disease and congestive heart failure. In conjunction with the case the fellow should also provide follow up care and management of that disease state. The case must follow the guidelines in addressing all seven (7) core competencies. You will be graded based on these core competencies and your outline of these during your case presentation. Lastly, the last 15 minutes of the topic should refer to the standard of care guidelines provided for that disease state. These are accessible on the acc.org website or any other standardized guideline reference. I want to emphasize that the case should be appropriate for your level of training. An example for the first years would be basics of ischemic heart disease, stress testing, heart failure and or valvular heart disease. A second year case may involve complexities of the care involving aggressive hemodynamic monitoring or cath lab interpretation. A third year course should be a master of it’s topic, it’s appropriate management and follow-up of patient with complex and multiple disease states. I would be happy to discuss your case with you prior to presentation. Again, the goal of this lecture is to help you to learn and understand a particular topic with reference to the standard guidelines and treatment and management. Morning Report Nearly every morning at 8am morning report is help which provides a review of interesting cases presenting in the hospital or lectures on pre-specified topics. South Jersey Heart Group supervises morning report at Our Lady of Lourdes on Thursday from 8-9am and at Kennedy Memorial Hospital on Thursday from 7-8am. There will be scheduled morning reports at Kennedy Memorial Hospital, Stratford; these will be assigned and a mandatory function. During most of the academic year a grand rounds conference will be held on Wednesday afternoons that will usually be lectures from both full and part-time faculty and also visiting lecturers. These are mandatory if you are on a rotation in the institution. Also, each fellow will present grand rounds two times a year at Stratford and at Our Lady of Lourdes. Second Year Cardiology Module During the month of September the second year student cardiology module will be given in the medical school and the fellows are encouraged to attend some of these lectures. These lectures will be core topics emphasizing the basics of cardiovascular medicine and can be a significant enhancement to the full understanding of the trainee in adult cardiology training. You will actively participate in this course. 36 CARDIOLOGY FELLOWSHIP CASE PRESENTATION EVALUATION FELLOW:_____________________________ATTENDING PHYSICIAN:___________________________ TOPIC:________________________________________________________________________________ DATE:_____________________________________ 1 = Did Not Meet Basic Standards 2= Met Minimum Standards 3= Met All Standards Osteopathic Philosophy / Osteopathic Manipulative Medicine 1. Osteopathic concepts and/or OMT was integrated into Presentation. Medical Knowledge 1. Demonstrated Competency in the understanding and application Of clinical medicine as applied to topic presented. 2. Knows and applies the foundations of clinical and behavioral Medicine. 3. Demonstrates strong understanding of standard of care Guidelines for presented disease state. Patient Care: 1. Gathered accurate, essential information from all sources Including histories and physical exams, medical records, Diagnostic/ therapeutic plans and treatments. 2. Validated competency in the performance of diagnosis, treatment And management. 3. Provided Insight into health care consistent with osteopathic Philosophy, including preventative medicine and health promotion Based on current scientific evidence and guidelines. Interpersonal and Communication Skills: 1. Exhibited effective written and oral skills, both with regard to Doctor/patient/peer relationships; as well as in preparation and Presentation of this case. Professionalism: 1. Adhered to ethical principals in the practice of medicine 2. Demonstrated awareness and proper attention to issues of Culture, religion, age, gender, sexual orientation, and mental And physical disabilities. Practice-Based Learning and Improvement: 1. Addressed presentation in a manner consistent with the most Current information on diagnostic and therapeutic effectiveness 2. Understood and applied research methods, medical informatics And the application of technology as applied to medicine Systems-Based Practice: 1. Demonstrated awareness of local health care delivery system And how it affects patient care and professional practice. 4= Exceeded All Standards (1) (2) (3) (4) 37 Please Complete Both Sides of Form CARDIOLOGY FELLOWSHIP CASE PRESENTATION EVALUATION Written Comments: Strong Points: _____________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ Areas for Improvement: _____________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ ____________________________________ Primary Evaluator _____________________________________ Printed Name Date ___________________________________ Fellow Signature (After Review) _____________________________________ Print Name Date ____________________________________ Program Director Date 38 Teaching Objectives The following guidelines have been established on the basis of standards as set forth in the Basic Standards for Residency Training in Cardiology, which in turn is based upon recommendation of the American College of Cardiology. These teaching objectives are to be used by fellows as specific, time-oriented goals and by the attending physicians as teaching guidelines. Reaching these goals by completion of fellowship is expected. The timetable for individual trainees may vary depending primarily on the scheduling of electives. First Year Upon completion of the first year of training the fellow should be able to: 1. Be able to conduct a complete and comprehensive history; especially cardiovascular history and be able to confidently assess the patients needs for further testing and treatment. 2. Perform a complete and comprehensive physical examination especially of the cardiovascular system, which includes thorough palpation and auscultation of the heart and blood vessels and categorize the cardiac and vascular abnormalities based upon the examination. 3. Understand and recognize the osteopathic abnormalities associated with pathology of the cardiovascular system. 4. Understand the basic electrocardiogram and be adept at interpreting the vast majority of the electrocardiographic abnormalities that are clinically encountered. 5. Recognize the chest radiographic manifestations of diseases of the heart and great vessels and understand the normal structures of the heart and cardiac silhouette. 6. Know the indications and usefulness of the echocardiographic and doppler studies of the heart and be able to recognize the normal structures seen on two-dimensional and M-Mode echocardiography. A fundamental understanding of ultrasound imaging and doppler flow including color signal definitions should also be attained. The common abnormalities of the echocardiographic examination should also be attained. 7. Understand the indications, contra-indications and basic interpretations of exercise and ambulatory electrocardiography and arrhythmia monitoring. 8. Have a fundamental understanding of the radiopharmaceuticals used in nuclear cardiology and a basic ability to recognize normal and abnormal findings, along with the indications for the various studies. 9. Understand the basics of the electrophysiologic examination and its indications and contraindications. 10. Recognize the more common arrhythmias and their evaluation and treatments. 11. Understand the fundamentals of artificial pacing, its indications and usefulness. Additionally, a basic recognition of pacemaker malfunction; and uses and operation of defibrillators should be attained. 12. Understand the indications and contra-indications of cardiac catheterization. And be able to interpret the basic cardiac angiogram and hemodynamic tracings. Second Year Upon successful completion of the second year of training the fellow should be able to: 1. Have adequately attained all of the requirements of the first year of training as noted above. 2. Perform a highly accurate cardiovascular history such that his diagnostic skills are approaching the accuracy of the attending cardiologist. 3. Perform a highly accurate cardiovascular physical examination with the ability to comprehensively determine the presence and nature of any cardiac structural abnormalities and vascular pathology. Recognition of essentially all the murmurs and heart sounds should be mastered 4. Interpret with high accuracy essentially all the electrocardiographic abnormalities encountered in clinical practice. 5. Perform an exercise stress study independently and be able to provide an accurate interpretation of the findings. 6. Accurately interpret any ambulatory arrhythmia study encountered in clinical practice. 7. Perform a hands-on echocardiographic study with attainment of all the views used in the study to degree that it is interpretable. 8. Interpret essentially all of the abnormalities of the echo and doppler study. 9. Interpret most of the nuclear studies typically encountered in clinical practice. 10. Understand the basic findings of the electrophysiology study. 11. Accurately read most cardiac angiograms. 12. Thoroughly understand the hemodynamics of most of the cardiac abnormalities typically encountered in clinical practice. 13. Understand the array of pacemaker parameters and settings used for the cardiac abnormalities encountered. 14. Dictation of basic echocardiography and stress testing as well as cath will begin with supervision. Third Year Upon successful completion of the third year the fellow should be able to: 1. Have adequately attained all of the requirements of the second year of training. 39 2. 3. 4. 5. Have mastered all of the facts of invasive and non-invasive testing, and clinical findings, and be able to understanding it to a depth that he/she can provide teaching of all of the material at a student and resident level. Have completed an AOA approved fellow research paper. Proficiently teach and mentor fellow physicians. Mastered dictation of all cardiovascular studies. 40 Scientific Research Requirement The AOA and ACOI require that one scientific research project be submitted by each cardiology fellow during his or her training. Please refer to the AOA/ACOI research requirements and guidelines as listed below. In order to provide for a scientific research report that meets AOA/ACOI requirements and that is submitted in a timely fashion, it will be required that each fellow provide a periodic progress report during the fellowship. A timetable has been established as follows. Citi Program for IRB approval (Due January 30th, first year of fellowship): Completion of this online program is a first and necessary part of your fellowship research project. This online program must be completed absolutely not later than January 30th of your first year of fellowship. Please furnish your program coordinator with a copy of your completion certificate. First report (due end of first year) By midway through the first year of the fellowship program each fellow should have already established a least the type of report (original research, case report) title, and co-investigators (authors) who will be involved in his or her project. At the very least, a project outline should already be established, such as hypothesis, methods, patient groups etc. This is due to the ACOI by the end of the first year. Second Report (due July 1st of the third fellowship year) By the end of he second year of training, the fellow should have essentially completed their research project and have it submitted in initial rough draft. This will allow enough additional time for any needed changes, corrections etc. so that a final report, ready for submission can be completed on time. Third Report (due December 30th of third year of training) The final product, ready for submission to the ACOI, should be given to the program director by the last day of December. The reports will then be copied and filed and subsequently submitted to the ACOI prior to the required deadline, which is by December of the third year. Case presentations must be in December of the third year. The ACOI will have it reviewed and if need be, any changes can be made prior to graduation. 41 Scientific Research Project Progress Report NAME:____________________________________ DATE:____________________________________ PART I (Due June 30th of First Year of Fellowship) Requirements: Category: ____________ Original Research ____________ Case Presentation Project Title:______________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ Author(s):________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ Please attach project outline (hypothesis, methods, patient groups, etc.) PART II (Due July 1st Third Year of Fellowship) Requirements: Initial Rough Draft Date Submitted:____________ Date Reviewed and Returned by Program Director:____________ PART III (Due December 30th, Third year of fellowship) Requirements: Completed Report (As outline in ACOI requirements) Date Submitted:____________ Date Accepted:____________ Date Reviewed and Returned by Program Director:____________ Project Submitted to ACOI: Date:____________ Revised 01/19/2009 42 Cardiovascular Services / General Information Included in this section of your fellowship manual is information for specific services in our cardiology fellowship training program. The outlines provide an introduction to the service and the fellow’s expectations; additional information will be given once rotating through that service. These are general guidelines to orient you to the particular service but some minor variations may exist, depending upon the specific trainer to which you are assigned. Naturally, each trainer will have slightly different expectations and methods of conducting his or her service and it is expected that the fellow comply with the wished of he individual trainer. Every attempt will be made on each service for the trainers to achieve 100% compliance with the teaching objectives. It is expected that each trainer will be fair in his or her evaluation of the fellow and it is also expected that the fellow be fair in his or her evaluation of the service and the trainer. Clinical Cardiology Responsibilities will include inpatient care and outpatient department evaluations. Each attending will have his or her own approach to rounds, teaching etc. The general guidelines regarding fellows responsibilities are outlines below. Inpatient Service: During the fellow’s assignment to a clinical cardiology service you are expected to 1) Supervise any students, interns and residents presently assigned to that service 2) Provide comprehensive admissions, histories and physicals, daily management and discharge instructions of the comprehensive care of the patients 3) Provide thorough and accurate progress notes to be presented to the attending cardiologist and 4) Provide any requested academic presentations to the attending physician and assigned house staff for mutual learning purposes. Admissions Admissions to the hospital are your responsibility. The complete history and physical must be written to specifically address all cardiovascular issues. An assessment and plan must be outlined. A complete review of systems and physical are to be documented OMM evaluation with treatment options must be documented. You are responsible for discussion and presentation to an attending physician. Also the house staff must be taught and their H&P must be reviewed. A problem list should be included on every patient note. It includes room for listing all diagnosis and pertinent study results and procedures. This should be completed on admission and updated during hospitalization as necessary. Completeness and accuracy is important since this form becomes part of the patient’s permanent record. The usefulness of this form cannot be overstated. It becomes very useful for evening and weekend and weekend on-call fellow when he/she is asked to evaluate a patient he/she is unfamiliar with. Sign out to the person on call is essential for all critical patients. Daily care is also your responsibility. You are expected to act as an attending. You should see all patients and discuss the cases with the house staff. It is expected that you begin to develop a differential diagnosis and institute a plan. As you develop your skills during training, more responsibility should be taken. As always, an attending will be available to round. Discharges Upon discharge a standard discharge summary needs to be completed at the time of discharge. Up to date problem lists significantly facilitate completion. A standard set of discharge orders must also be written for each patient. These orders must include a discharge diet, follow-up instructions, activity instructions, medications and other instructions such as endocarditis prophylaxis, scheduling of outpatient visits and testing, etc. It is preferred that these orders are written on the day before discharge. These orders are used by the nurses for patient teaching purposes and unit secretaries for scheduling purposes, such as follow-up stress test, outpatient visits, etc. Prescriptions for the patient should also be written for Saturday discharges; this prevents the Saturday on-call fellow from being inundated with unnecessary work. Remember you will be on Saturday call too! Help each other out. All aspects of the discharge form must be filled out. If a patient is intolerant to medicines that are normally used for that disease state, this must be addressed. You must dictate that it is contraindicated or not medically necessary. Transfers When a patient requires transfer to another service, for example, the Medical Intensive Care Unit, the transfer orders and a summary should be written. The attending whose service the patient is transferred to must be specified in the orders. Verbal sign out to the transferring service is required. When a patient is transferred from another service, likewise they should be accompanied by orders, transfer note and a verbal sign-out (no verbal sign out is usually given from the Surgical Intensive Care Unit). The receiving fellow should review the transfer orders to check for completeness and should see the patient on the same day of transfer. Patients that get transferred from another hospital to OLOL must have the H&P done and orders written for transfer. 43 Outpatient Service Fellows are expected to attend the various outpatient activities assigned during each particular service such as private and clinical office hours, and part of the requirements is long-term care and follow-up care of patients throughout his/her three years of training. You are required to attend clinic ½ day per week for 36 months and maintain a log of patients seen. All patient encounters must be kept in the log. Please note new patient encounters versus follow-up visits. The program coordinator keeps these logs in your file. I would recommend you also keep a copy for yourself. If an outpatient requires admission at the time you are seeing him/her, one dictation and an admission history and physical is all that is required. Please note during the dictation that it is a history and physical when dictating. Miscellaneous Additional instructions regarding your service responsibilities will be given to you by each individual attending cardiologist. Each physician has his/her own special way of doing things and therefore more specific guidelines cannot be given at this time. Please be attentive to the wishes of your attending cardiologist since he/she is the only one who is ultimately responsible for the patients care. It is hoped for that you will be able to attend all educational activities such as conferences, journal club etc., while on all services at UMDNJ; please make your attending cardiologist aware of your attendance to these functions. If you need to be inaccessible from your service for any period of time during the day, such as to leave the building to run an errand, etc., please choose an opportune time to do so and do not leave the service without the permission of the attending physician. Arrange for coverage during your period of absence. Fellows may elect to seek specific clinical rotations in areas such as pediatric cardiology, congestive heart failure clinics, lipid clinics, etc. but only as approved in advance by the program director. All of the requirements noted above also apply to any of the clinical options. No outside rotations will be granted outside of Southern New Jersey. CCU Rotation While assigned to any of the critical care services (CCU,ICU,CVU,SICU) the fellow will be required to: 1) Supervise all assigned house staff 2) Provide comprehensive progress notes for presentation to the attending staff 3) Provide academic presentations as assigned to him/her 4) Rapidly assess and attend to any appropriate emergency department admissions or in house emergent or urgent unstable patients already in one of the unites or in need of a transfer to the appropriate unit 5) Timely and efficient treatment and ultimate transfer of a unit patient to a general medical or step down floor 6) Provide courteous interaction with the nursing staff and other ancillary staff involved in the critical care of the patient and likewise is expected to involved these ancillary personnel in his/her academic presentations and teaching so as to promote a sense of unity and learning progress as a cooperative critical care team. 7) While in the coronary care unit you are responsible for all intraoperative transesophagealechocardiograms performed on the surgical patients. You are to get down to the operating room before patients are placed on bypass and perform the pre-operative TEE. You then should return to the intensive care unit and begin your rounding responsibilities. The post-operative TEE’s are usually performed mid-morning and you are to go back and perform the post-op procedures. The remainder of the time in the CCU is dedicated to patient care, rounding with housestaff and writing appropriate notes on patients. It must be emphasized that your responsibilities are to all of the patients in the unit regardless of what group they are from. You will oversee the resident in performing any procedures. Please refer to the subspecialty basic standards for specific numbers for certification. All TEE’s must be maintained on a log and supplied to your program coordinator. Surgical Intensive Care Unit Intensive Care Fellow Responsibilities The fellow, when on duty in the Intensive Care Unit: 1) Is in the unit at all times, carries a beeper and notifies the charge nurse when leaving the ICU. 2) Is in charge of the care of all patients in the ICU and serves as a focal point of communication between surgeon, cardiologist, anesthetist and family. He should be personally certain that all problems are brought to the attention of the ICU staff. You are required to provide care to all cardiology group patients. 3) Discusses each postoperative patient immediately upon arrival in the ICU with the anesthetist, the surgeon and the physician in charge of the ICU. 44 4) 5) 6) 7) 8) 9) Discusses with the anesthetist and physician in charge of the patient the immediate postoperative orders. Fellow coordinates patient care with the primary nurse. The ICU fellow should fill out the doctor’s order form of each assigned patient as completely and clearly as possibly, including medication, IV fluids, etc. These may be changed as necessary. SICU does not use verbal orders! Accepts verbal orders from attending physicians. Check pacemaker function and availability of standby equipment when the patient is being paced. Writes a note in the chart of each assigned patient daily. The note should include pertinent procedures such as subclavian and arterial line insertions, dialysis, catheter insertion, cardioversion, etc. The note should also detail drug infusions, wound condition, foley catheter and chest tube drainage and pertinent physical findings. Writes a full consultation note when consultation is requested. You may not dictate consults. Makes every effort to speak directly to the consultant to minimize communication problems and delays. No consults are to be ordered without direct approval of the ICU staff, primary surgeon or primary cardiologist. You are responsible to coordinate care with the appropriate cardiothoracic surgeon. Please be advised that Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital the ultimate patient responsibility in the SICU is the surgeons and therefore you must respect those decisions. Please commit to your recommendations on the chart, but all orders should be discussed with the appropriate attending. Revised 01/19/2009 45 Electrophysiology / Pacemaker Services During assignment to the EP services the fellow will be exposed to all of the aspects that this subspecialty entails. He/she will be required to perform EP consultations that often will require the evaluation of ecg’s and rhythm strips. He will be required to perform complete admissions, history and physicals and complete patient work-up. Responsibilities in the lab will be under the direction of the attending. Exposure to all lab aspects of EPS including pacemakers, ICD’s and biventricular pacers will be provided. Office management of EP patients will be at the Washington Twp. and Cherry Hill offices. Electrophysiology Syllabus Importance: Complex cardiac arrhythmias are managed with expertise in cardiac electrophysiology, the use of implantable pacemakers, ICD’s, antiarrhythmic agents and techniques utilizing electrophysiologic mapping and ablation. Scope of the Training: Within the cardiology core training program, level 1 training will comprise of atleast 2 months of clinical cardiac electrophysiology rotation. This will assist the trainee to: Acquire knowledge in the diagnosis and management of brady and tachy arrhythmias Learn the indications and limitations of invasive EP testing, ambulatory ECG monitoring, event recorders and stress testing for arrhythmia assessment. Gain experience in the arrhythmia consultation service. Learn the fundamentals of cardiac pacing; recognize normal and abnormal pacemaker function and learn indications for temporary and permanent pacing. Learn indications for ICD’s and biventricular pacing. Understand pacing modes, interrogation, programming and surveillance of pacers and ICD’s. Learn/perform cardioversions. Learn indications for tilt table testing for evaluation of syncope. Gain exposure to interpretation of complex arrhythmias on the surface ECG. EP Fellowship Lectures Introduction to EP Indications for EP Testing Syncope – Diagnosis and Management Cardiac Cellular Electrophysiology SVT Management of AFib/Flutter Cardiac Channelopathies VT Pacemakers – Temporary / Permanent Sudden Cardiac Death and ICD Trials ECG Review Antiarrhythmic Drugs Pacemakers – Trouble Shooting EP Tracing Review 46 Non-Invasive Laboratory The non-invasive laboratory offers training in electrocardiography and echocardiography. Fellows rotating on the service will participate in the interpretation of ecg’s and the performance and interpretation of transthoracic echocardiograms. The daily organization of activities will be discussed at the beginning of the rotation. The following are general guidelines regarding activities in the laboratory. Electrocardiography Electrocardiograms performed on both inpatients and outpatients are reviewed by the fellows. EKG’s are delivered to the reading room. Fellows should spend time between echocardiography cases reviewing ekg’s. Basic EKG interpretation Most ekg tracings come with computer-generated interpretation. They have to be reviewed and approved or properly revised (on an interpretation sheet) first by the fellows and then by the attending cardiologist (on the ekg space allotted for interpretation) before editing and rendering of final reports by the ekg technicians. Some ekg tracings recorded by the floor nurses using ekg machines come without computer interpretation capability will come with an interpretation sheet. This sheet must be completed and initialed by the fellow. 1. Complete the form with rate, intervals and axis. 2. Identify the rhythm 3. Comment on abnormalities of condition (arrhythmias, intraventricular conduction delays etc.) 4. Comments on abnormalities of the P waves, QRS complex, ST segment, T waves 5. Note any other abnormalities (infarction, hypertrophy, etc.) 6. Note any changes from previous tracings 7. When pacing is present, comment on evidence for sensing and capture, the appropriate chambers paced (when possible based upon the tracing) and the abnormalities or pacing. 47 EKG TOPICS 2009/ 2010 EKG TOPICS GENERAL 20102011 2009/ 2010 20102011 ATRIAL ARRHYTHMIAS Measurments Premature atrial beats Calibration Ectopic Atrial Rhythm P waves Ectopic Atrial Tachycardia Q waves Paroxysmal Atrial Tachycardia QRS complex Multifocal Atrial Tachycardia ST waves Atrial Flutter T waves Atrial Fibrillation General approach to EKGs JUNCTIONAL RHYTHMS ATRIAL ABNORMALITIES Junctional rhythm left atrial abnormality right atrial abnormality VENTRICULAR ABNORMALITIES Left ventricular hypertrophy Junctional tachycardia AV nodal reentrant tachycardia VENTRICULAR ARRHYTHMIAS Prmature ventricular complexes right ventricular hypertrophy VT vs. Abberency biventricular hypertrophy Idiopathic ventricular rhythm Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy Accelerated idioventricular rhythm Left bundle branch block Ventricular Tachycardia Right bundle branch block Ventricular Flutter Intraventricular conduction delay Ventricular Fibrillation Polymorphic ventricular tachycardia Left anterior fascicular block Left posterior fascicular block AXIS DEVIATION Torsades de Pointes ATRIOVENTRICULAR BLOCKS Left axis deviation First degree AVB Right axis deviation Second degree Mobitz I ISCHEMIA, INJURY, INFARCT Second degree Mobits II Ischemia (T wave inversion) 2:1 AV block Injury (subepicardial injury) Third degree (complete) ABB Injury (subendocardial injury) PREEXCITATION Q waves Wolff-Parkinson-White Inferior AV renetrant tachycardia Posterior Lown-Ganong-Levine Syndrome Anterior Mahaim type of Preexcitation Lateral Pseudoinfarction localization of bypass tract DRUGS acute MI Digoxin recent MI Antiarrhythmic Agents age undetermined MI old MI Psychotropic Agents ELECTROLYTE ABNORMALITIES reciprocol ST and T changes Hyperkalemia ST AND T WAVE CHANGES Primary changes Secondary changes PERICARDITIS Hypokalemia Hypercalcemia Hypocalcemia Hypermagnesemia Pericarditis PULMONARY DISEASE Hypomagnesemia Sodium abnormalities COPD Acute pulmonary embolus pH abnormalities CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM 48 CONGENITAL HEART DISEASE CNS effects ASD HYPOTHERMIA VSD PDA Coarctation Hypothermia MISCELLANEOUS Mitral valve prolapse syndrome Pulmonary stenosis skeletal abnormalities Tetology of Fallot Nonspecific ST and T changes Ebstein's Anomaly Prolonged QT Dextrocardia Abnormal U waves Corrected Transposition Misplacement of Limb Leads ARRHYTHMIAS Misplacement of precordial leads SINUS RHYTHMS Poor R wave progression Normal sinus rhythm Sinus Arrhythmia Low voltage PACEMAKERS Sinus Bradycardia Pacemaker codes Sinus Tachycardia Single chamber Sinus Pause Duel Chamber Sinus Arrest Sinoatrial Block 49 Echocardiography During the rotation in the echo laboratory the fellow will be responsible in working closely with the echo technician in an effort to obtain hands on skills with the ultimate goal of becoming expert in obtaining a complete echocardiographic and Doppler study. He/she will interpret the majority of the studies done within the laboratory and review these studies with the attending cardiologist in order to learn proper interpretation skills. He/she will be responsible for the careful handling of the esophageal probe and learn proper manipulation and imaging with the probe under the supervision of the attending cardiologist. At times he/she may be required to complete an interpretation report or dictate a comprehensive report. The fellow will also be responsible for exercise and pharmacological stress testing during his rotation through the echo laboratory, including non-echocardiographic stress testing as his/her time allows. At the beginning of the second year, the fellow will begin to learn dictation of echos. Mmode studies will be evaluated and discussed. It is well recognized that the technical staff have a great deal of expertise to offer the fellows in the acquisition of technically excellent images. The technologists are also skilled in interpretation. The fellow should approach his/her experience in the echo lab as a student recognizing that his/her teachers will be technical as well as the physician staff. The physician staff will be more oriented towards the instruction in the interpretation of echocardiograms. Evaluations of fellow will reflect their acquisition of both technical and interpretive skills and will be based upon the judgments of both the technical as well as the physician staff. Standards for Image Acquisition In this section is a checklist of standard views required on all transthoracic echocardiograms as well as additional reviews required for specific clinical problems. It is expected that on each study the fellow will acquire images in the standard format. Even a specific view is technically suboptimal is should be acquired on tape to demonstrate that an attempt was made to acquire the image. It also will serve as an opportunity to instruct the fellow on how to improve suboptimal image when they occur. The fellow should take the opportunity to do a brief cardiac examination on the patient prior to performing an echo. The should guide the fellow in the use of color flow doppler during acquisition of each of these five views. Specific techniques for identifying valvular lesions and other abnormalities will be taught in the laboratory. A checklist will be used to assure that standard views are obtained and that in-depth investigation of specific cardiac abnormalities occurs with all cases. For quality assurance, 3 echos per month will be read and logged on the forming the noninvasive lab. 2-D Study Each study should have at least 10 beats of each of the following views: 1) Parasternal long axis (include off-axis tricuspid view) 2) Parasternal short axis (include off-axis tricuspid/ pulmonic views) 3) Apical Four chamber 4) Apical Two chamber 5) Subxiphoid Doppler When indicated, all valves should be interrogated by doppler. The specific valves and lesions include: Aortic Stenosis: Flow velocities from Apical Four Chamber Suprasternal Notch – Pedoff transducer Right Upper parasternal – Pedoff transducer Aortic Insufficiency: Color flow and PW when color flow signal poor Parasternal Long axis Parasternal Short axis Apical Four chamber Mitral Stenosis: Pressure half-time measurements from Apical four chamber Apical Two chamber Mitral Insufficiency: Color flow and PW when color flow signal poor Parasternal Long axis Apical Four chamber Apical two chamber Tricuspid Insufficiency: Color flow and PW when color flow signal poor Parasternal Long axis (off-axis tricuspid view) Parasternal Short axis (off-axis tricuspid view) Apical four chamber 50 Subxiphoid Interpretation of Transthoracic Echocardiograms Immediately following the completion of the study, the study should be reviewed by the attending cardiologist or the senior noninvasive fellow (at the discretion of the attending cardiologist.) The fellow performing the procedure should write up the study with the following format: Chamber measurements (from M-mode and 2D_ Doppler measurements 2-D Narrative Chamber sizes Left ventricular function Right ventricular function (if abnormal) Aortic valve morphology and function Mitral valve morphology and function Tricuspid valve morphology and function Pulmonic valve morphology and function (if abnormal) Other abnormalities LVH Intracardiac masses Pericardial abnormalities Aortic abnormalities Septal defects Doppler Narrative (may immediately follow the related 2D findings) Valve abnormalities (regurgitation or stenosis) Shunts Other flow abnormalities Estimated systolic or mean PA pressure LV dp/dt Estimated systolic RV pressure (in VSD) Pressure half-time of AR flow velocity Reporting of transthoracic echocardiograms If the study was performed on a patient from the outpatient clinic, the attending cardiologist ordering the study should be called as soon as the study has been reviewed. The hand-written report is then given to the secretary for the transcription and signature of the attending cardiologist. Transesophageal Echocardiography Indication of Transesophageal Echocardiography (TEE) Ambulatory Patients: 1. Difficult and inadequate TTE 2. Evaluation of prosthetic valve malfunction 3. Evaluation of bacterial encocarditis 4. Evaluation of intracardiac mass 5. Evaluation of aortic dissection 6. Evaluation of congenital heart disease, especially atrial septal defect and patent foramen ovale 7. Better assessment of severity of mitral regurgitation 8. Evaluation of the source of systemic emboli Operating Room and ICU or ER settings: 1. Cardiac evaluation in open chest trauma patients 2. Pre-operative evaluation of valvular or congenital lesions 3. Immediate postoperative assessment of the results of cardiac or aortic surgery 4. Monitoring of left ventricular function during surgery 5. Checking of intracardiac air immediately after surgery 6. Evaluation of the cause of heart failure or low output state after surgery 7. Evaluation of cardiac tamponade after surgery 51 Procedures for performing TEE: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Informed consent is obtained Nothing by mouth for at least 4 hours prior to TEE Sedation, if required, using Versed, Demerol or Valium, etc. Xylocaine or Benzocaine local anesthetic gargle and orapharnageal spray to facilitate probe entry Nasal oxygen and suction stand-by Every 3 minute check of blood pressure, pulse and oxygen saturation, the latter if preceded by IV sedation Patient lies in left lateral position with head anteflexed Introduction of TEE probe through mouth into esophagus and further advanced into stomach Imaging at 3 standard position, namely: gastric, lower esophageal and high esophageal with proper flexion and rotation of the probe Interpretation of the TEE: While manipulating the TEE probe to optimize the cardiac images, structural findings are noted and with the aid of color flow imaging, flow patterns across the valves and the intracardiac defects are observed. Important findings are communicated to the surgeons whenever the examiner see fit. Video recording of the displayed images are made for permanent record. Procedures for reporting results of TEE: The TEE report includes not only the TEE findings but also the pre-medications given, the patients tolerance of the procedure and the presence or absence of complications and proper remedial steps undertaken and the final outcome. Emergency TEE: Emergency TEE at night or during the weekend is performed by echo attending on call. Dobutamine Echocardiography Indications: 1. Detection of viable hibernating myocardium 2. Diagnosis of significant CAD in patients unable to exercise 3. Cardiac risk stratification post-MI inpatients unable to exercise 4. Pre-operative cardiac risk evaluation Contra-indications: 1. Significant uncontrolled ventricular arrhythmias 2. Atrial fibrillation with uncontrolled ventricular response 3. High grade AV block 4. Severe hypertension (Systolic >200 mmHg / Diastolic >120 mmHg) 5. Hemodynamic instability 6. Severe valvular disease 7. Unstable angina 8. Acute myocardial infarction within the past 5 days 9. New York Heart Association Class III or IV 10. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy 11. Technically poor echocardiographic windows 12. Allergy to dobutamine 13. Atropine is contra-indicated in patients with glaucoma and prostatism Before Dobutamine Echocardiography: 1. Schedule the test with Echo personnel before entering the order into the computer system 2. Beta-blocker therapy should be discontinued 24-48 hours prior to study 3. Nothing by mouth (except for medications) for three hours prior to testing Evening and Weekend Studies There will be instances in which transthoracic echocardiograms are necessary during the evenings and on weekends. In all such instances the attending on-call should be notified. If a fellow who is on call is experienced in echocardiography, he or she may perform the study. The study should be discussed with the echocardiography attending as well as with the physician ordering the study. When performing echo, all studies must be recorded and documented, even if it is brief and or 52 technically limited. Technicians are available 24 hours a day to guide your study. An attending must be notified if a stat study is to be done. Transesophageal echocardiograms requested as urgent or emergent procedures must be performed in collaboration with the echocardiography attending on-call. Advanced fellows meeting case-load requirements for credentials in echocardiography may be allowed to do emergent or emergent echocardiograms at the discretion of the echocardiography attending on-call, but it is expected that this will occur infrequently and the attending must be present. Please refer to current policies and procedures for all STAT echos and order accordingly. Electrocardiography and Exercise Stress Testing During the nuclear cardiology rotation and at times during echo and clinical rotations the fellow will be responsible in learning the proper and safe way to perform treadmill and pharmacologic stress testing. He/she will need to be able to properly assess the patient and determine the appropriateness of the test being performed and adequately explain the procedure to the patient and obtain a signed consent. He/she will supervise the test from beginning to end and act accordingly to the needs of the patient should any complications or instability occur. He will provide the interpretation of the study, review it with the attending cardiologist for accuracy, and provide a completed interpretation form for dictation. It is important that he/she learn the proper dosing of any pharmacologic agents used in testing and know how to accurately calculate and assess the proper intravenous concentration of the drug as prepared by the pharmacy. Nuclear Regulatory Commission requirements for nuclear certification will be met over the course of three years for the noninvasive track. You must perform a certain number of studies and dictate as well. Also you will have the appropriate lectures and exposure to nuclear agents. You will perform the daily quality assurance testing in the nuclear lab with the nuclear medicine technologist. Every month you will complete the four nuclear quality assurance studies and complete the form and turn it in to the technologist for evaluation. Nuclear Cardiology In addition to the responsibilities noted for exercise stress testing above, there are specific expectations of the fellow during his assignment to nuclear cardiology. The nuclear regulatory commission has very specific requirements for any personnel working in a laboratory that uses radioactive materials and these requirements must be referred to an adhered to in a strict manner. The fellow will need to learn the proper handling of these materials and know their pharmacology and uses in clinical cardiology. Proper and accurate description to the patient is needed and at times consents for their use must be obtained by the fellow. The fellow will learn how to evaluate and interpret the nuclear studies under the guidance of an attending physician, and learn the optimum agents and their limitation for each clinical situation. Reporting Hours during Stress Rotation at SJHG / Cherry Hill Effective July 1st, 2007 all fellows on a stress rotation at SJHG/CH will report to the Cherry Hill office not later than 6:30am on Tuesday and Wednesday in order to complete the morning nuclear QA. This time may change to 6:00am depending on patient scheduling; please check with Fran the day before for your exact reporting time. This daily QA is part of your nuclear credentialing process. The fellow will do the morning QA on those days and give copies of the daily report to Kate for archiving; Fran will counter-sign the report. Fran will go over the QA form with you, as there are tasks done on a weekly, monthly, bimonthly and quarterly basis. You will be responsible to complete the daily and weekly items; and ideally will be exposed at some point during your rotation to those procedures performed on a quarterly basis. Some of these objectives will be discussed during your Nuclear Stress lectures. The goal of this initiative is to give the fellow proficiency in the nuclear lab in order to prepare for credentialing at an independent operator status. 53 CARDIAC CATHETERIZATION LABORATORY CURRICULUM GOALS AND OBJECTIVES: Educational purpose and rationale or value as part of training of interventional cardiologist 1st year fellow: The primary goal is to gain experience and expertise in the performance of right heart catheterization and arterial access to prepare the on call fellow for procedures that may need to be performed during the call. The secondary goal is to gain familiarity with a left heart catheterization. 2nd and 3rd year fellows: The primary goal is to gain experience and expertise in the performance of left heart catheterization. All trainees should learn the appropriate selection of patients for cardiac catheterization, both left and right heart, and the specifics outlined below. Learn the risks and benefits of cardiac catheterization. Learn how to assess which patients are at risk for developing renal failure and to minimize that risk. Learn how to take a history for dye induced allergic reactions and to minimize that risk. Learn the use of pre-medications and medications in the cath lab for conscious sedation. Learn indications for the use of ionic vs. nonionic contrast media. Become familiar with how to organize the schedule of a busy laboratory performing same day outpatient to inpatient to emergency procedures. Learn how to acquire a pre-catheterization history and physical and document the same. Learn the technique of obtaining arterial and venous access. Learn the technique of left and right heart catheterization, and right heart biopsy. Learn how to interpret the results of a left and right heart catheterization. Learn how to convey the results of a catheterization in the patient chart. Learn how to remove arterial and venous sheaths and maintain hemostasis. For groins with larger arterial puncture sites, learn the use of mechanical device compression to gain hemostasis. The above goals require invasive fellows to develop extraordinary set of communication and interpersonal skills. These skills are honed daily with the teaching and guidance from attending physicians. CARDIAC CATHETERIZATION LABORATORY CURRICULUM GOALS AND OBJECTIVES: Per COCAT requirements, exposure to percutaneous coronary interventions will occur during your three years of cardiac catheterization training. As a first year fellow, general observations regarding PTCA / stents will be performed. Educational experience will include cath / PTCA case conference. You will be exposed to indications and contraindications of these procedures, patient selection and techniques utilized to perform these procedures. Second and third year fellows will build on the first year base with the addition of gaining understanding of the catheters / devices and drugs used in the treatment of patients with coronary artery disease and acute myocardial infarction, as well as improved patient selection as dictated by the literature and the attending staff. You will become familiar with indications / contraindications of primary angioplasty as supported by medical literature. Per the COCAT requirements you will gain exposure and hands on experience at the discretion of the attending physicians. This is not a level 3 training program for interventional cardiology so your academic and hands on training experience is limited to Level I certification which is defined as exposure to interventional cardiology. The American College of Cardiology training guidelines state that programs that do not have an interventional training program should have exposure to cardiac intervention and this is provided in our program at Our Lady of Lourdes Medical Center under the direction and supervision of the interventional cardiologists. Methodology of Teaching Goals and Objectives Principal Teaching Method The principal method for teaching will be directly interacting with the patient, scrubbing in shoulder to shoulder with the attending physician and interpreting the results of a catheterization with the attending physician. The catheterization laboratory currently performs 2,000 procedures per year. These include coronary intervention, diagnostic left heart catheterization for patients with valvular heart disease and chest pain disorders, right heart catheterization for patients with 54 congestive heart failure and diagnostic catheterization for patients being evaluated for organ transplantation such as liver and kidney. It is anticipated that each fellow will participate in not less than 60 left heart catheterizations per month during a typical cath rotation. It is the responsibility of the attending physician to be an example for the invasive fellow particularly in terms of interpersonal and communication skills to patients and patient’s families. Through personal example of the attending physician will show the invasive fellows how to implement system-based practice as well as practice-based learning. The invasive fellow will be a role model for the general cardiology fellow in the cath lab. The senior fellow will take the lead role in the cath lab and introduce the first, second and third year fellows to the nuances of he cath lab and will remain a teaching tool o the general cardiology fellows. Educational Content Mix of Disease The recommended text is Grossman’s Fifth Edition of Cardiac Catheterization. Formal conferences consist of a monthly cardiac catheterization conference. This conference will stress the relation of history and physical findings to the hemodynamic and angiographic criteria for the selection of patients for medical, surgical and interventional therapy. Interaction with the cardiac surgeons at this conference is very important. The relation of non-invasive to invasive testing will be stressed. The presentation of original non-invasive studies will be important. There is a mix of social economic status among our patients providing an abundant supply of diverse patient population. Through example the invasive fellow will learn responsiveness to the needs to patients in all social economic groups. This will include a commitment to respect and compassion towards all patients. All fellows will strive to excellence and ongoing professional development. Method of Evaluation Fellows will be evaluated by written critique on a monthly basis with input from all academic cath lab attendings. This critique will include interpersonal skills, knowledge of cardiology, technical skills in the cath lab and the quality of the cath conference presentations. Likewise, the fellow will evaluate the cath rotation and attendings on a monthly basis. These written evaluations will be made available to and discussed with the fellow during quarterly evaluations. Patients for Cardiac Catheterization Patients who will be going for cardiac catheterization will be worked up and pre-medicated by the catheterization fellow and the cath film will be reviewed by the catheterization attending with the clinical attending and you, the assigned fellow. The cath results are almost always discussed with the patient and their family on the same day. It is usually the fellow’s responsibility to discuss these results, write a note and record the results on the face sheet; however, this is left up to the discretion of the attending physician. YOU MUST SEE EVERY CATH PATIENT AND EXAMINE THEM PRIOR TO PERFORMING ANY PROCEDURE ON A PATIENT. You must identify yourself as a fellow in training prior to any patient contact. Specific iodine prep is outlined as well as elevated creatinine. Please see the protocol sheet. Adult Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory General Instructions: We are performing cases daily between 7:00am to 5:30pm. Our morbidity and mortality from cardiac catheterization are better than the national average. Our prime concerns are the safety of the patient, patient care, then teaching. You are responsible for a full and complete evaluation of the patient prior to the cath. The patient should be presented to the attending and the case discussed. 55 To meet these requirements, we ask you to follow the instructions carefully and to read the enclosed article, which may be helpful to you. Everyone in our labs is willing to help you train as an invasive cardiologist and we ask for you full cooperation. The list of patients for catheterization for the next day will be available in the late afternoon, and can be found in our OLOL office. EACH PATIENT SHOULD THEN BE SEEN BY THE FELLOW AND EXAMINED WITH PARTICULAR ATTENTION PAID TO THE FOLLOWING: Cardiac Catheterization and Angiography The fellow will be expected to provide the proper pre-catheterization work up and preparation of his/her assigned patients and be knowledgeable enough to adequately explain the procedure to the patient and obtain informed consent. He will work exclusively under the guidance of an attending cardiologist who will be scrubbed with the fellow during the performance of the procedure. Under the attending cardiologists instruction the fellow will be given various levels of hands on involvement in the lab. Ultimately, the fellow would be expected to be capable of performing a complete study under the guidance of an attending if he/she is enrolled in the invasive track, while the expectations of the non-invasive fellow would be less. He needs to learn the proper procedure for obtaining homeostasis at the completion of arterial and venous puncture studies such as manual pressure and the use of clamps and various other devices used in the closure of the puncture site. He/she will be responsible for providing the appropriate pre and post cath orders for the patient and the supply of discharge instructions for the safe transition to the outpatient for his or her return to home. He/she is expected to be capable of learning the accurate interpretation of any obtained hemodynamics and angiograms, and may be expected to provide a written interpretation for the patient’s records. During the course of this rotation the fellow will need to be able to learn the appropriate options of care for the patient based upon the hemodynamic findings and angiograms (i.e., surgical, medical, catheter based treatment options). You will have regularly scheduled cath conferences which are a mandatory didactic fellowship function. Pre-cath Instructions: Pre-cath orders should be written the evening before the procedure. Routine orders are as follows: 1. NPO past midnight 2. Prep both groin and arm only as indicated 3. Pre-med with Benadryl 50mg p.o. These medications should be administered at 6:30am for all first morning cases and “on=call” for all other cases. Dosages of pre-medications may be adjusted in individual cases (elderly, COPD, thin patients, etc). Management of diabetic patients should be discussed with the attending prior to the cath. Generally these patients should be scheduled early in the morning if possible, especially insulin dependent diabetic patients, severe CHF, etc. Patients with allergy to contrast, protocols are available and will be given to you during your rotation. Coumadin should be discontinued before admission. If a patient is on Heparin, it should be discontinued at least 2 hours prior to cath except for patients with unstable angina. 4. 5. The catheterization procedure and risk should be discussed with the patient and their family. The family should be asked in the next day (in the morning, if possible.) Contact the attending and discuss the cases and procedures planned. Informed consent must be obtained by the fellow after explaining the procedures to the patient. The cath lab booklet must be given to the patient. During Catheterization and Post-Catheterization Instructions: 1. During the cath lab procedure, please remember that the patient is awake. Unnecessary talk or discussion is not allowed. 2. DO NOT GIVE ANY INFORMATION TO THE PATIENT, since the finding s on video or not as good as one the cine film. 3. At the end of each case, the progress note must be written detailing the type of procedure done, any complications, the attending that performed the procedure, the location of the catheter entry, and the post-cath status of the pulses. Also a brief preliminary report should be written. The day following the catheterization, a short follow-up note should be placed on the chart. 4. All calculations, ejection fractions, A-V differences, and oxygen consumption values should be calculated and filled out on the data sheet. Please discuss with the appropriate attending regarding any questions. 5. All data sheets and pressure tracings must be delivered to the Cath Lab office by the end of the same day 6. Post-cath orders are to be completed by the fellow and reviewed by the attending. 7. The cath site should be examined for the presence of a hematoma and the peripheral pulses should be evaluated. A note should then be recorded on the daily progress note sheet. The cath lab attending must be notified of all complications resulting from catheterization. Also, all complication report forms should be sent to the Cath lab office, since it has to be entered into the database of the cath lab. 56 Contrast Dye Allergy Prophylaxis: Assess with individual attending. Cath Lab Protocols I. Iodine Allergy Prednisone 40 mg. 10pm. Night before procedure Zantac 150 mg. 6am Day of procedure II. Creatinine 1.5 – 2.0 OR GFR < 60 on CMP I. Mucomyst 600 mg. P.O. BID One day before procedure II. 3 Amps. NaHCO3 +1000cc D5/W 100 cc/hr. Start 1 hr. before procedure Creatinine > 1.2 STOP nephrotoxic drugs especially NSAIDS pre-cath III. Latex Allergy: Notify pre-admission testing and cath-lab Patient needs isolation upon admission Thank You, Anil G. Kothari, M.D, 05/26/06 Cathlab Equipment Lead aprons, glasses and any other cath lab equipment will be purchased by OLOL. These arrangements must have prior approval from the Program Director before speaking to the Cath Lab director for purchasing. This is done on a group basis, not on an individual basis. Appointments to order your lead will be scheduled with the appropriate parties by your program director and/or program coordinator. 57 Night / Weekend / Holiday Call Coverage The fellow call schedule will be decided by the program director. Responsibilities include two weeknight calls per week unless you are on the weekend. Weekend call will involve approximately 14 weekends per year. Call begins 5:00pm Friday and ends Monday 9:00am. You will be first call for all hospitals and outpatient calls. There is a backup attending on call with you. You are expected to address the calls and make decisions as a junior attending. Any issue may be discussed with the attending. You are responsible to go into the hospital if the situation warrants it. Again, each case should be discussed with the attending if warranted. You are not required to stay in house for the calls. Holiday coverage is one major and one minor holiday per calendar year. Rounding in the hospitals will be with an attending. You are responsible to decide how the weekend rounds will be divided with the attending. Full notes and plan are to be done by the fellow. Notes are to be on the charts by the time the attending rounds. You will then discuss the case with the attending and your plan will be evaluated. 58 59 60 61 Vacation Scheduling Each fellow will be granted 4 weeks of vacation time (20 work days) each academic year. Vacation scheduling forms are available from the program coordinator. Requests for vacations must be submitted by the first of the month preceding the month in which the vacation will occur. For example, the vacation is October, time off must be formally requested by September 1st. It is preferred and highly encouraged that fellows try to avoid taking vacation time while on clinical service at UMDNJ. If you need vacation time during these scheduled vacations, please discuss this need in advance with your program director. Your program coordinator maintains a time-off book, before requesting any time off, please consult the book to make sure that there is adequate fellow coverage. Blank time off and conference request forms are in the book and are turned in to the program coordinator for approval. After completion and submission of your time off request, both the program director and the chairman of cardiology will review the request and all reasonable requests will be honored on a first-come, first-served basis. It is expected that prior to leaving for vacation you complete all of your responsibilities such as medical records; discharge summaries, catheterization reports, nuclear and echo QA, monthly service evaluations, monthly timesheets, etc. If a fellows medical records etc. are significantly behind or other requirements have not been brought up to date, this could possibly lead to a denial for requested vacation. Staying up to date with your responsibilities should not be difficult. The 20 days of vacation time given each year must be used during that academic year and cannot be carried out into the next academic year unless a special circumstance exists and permission is granted by the program director and chairman of the department. Any unapproved or un-notified absence from the hospital could possibly result in loss of vacation time as judged by the program director. If you become ill and cannot report to your rotation, please follow the protocol as listed in the manual. Addendum— This document will be a formal attachment to your cardiology manual. It is to clarify the vacation, personal leave and family leave time off. This is in conjunction to the agreement between the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New JerseySchool of Osteopathic Medicine and the Committee of Interns and Residents. As you know in this agreement it states clearly what amount of time off you have available to you. One area that needs clarification is the requirement for fellowship and coordination in conjunction with your time off. If you were to utilize all of the time that is available to you, you would not meet the attendance requirements to graduate from your fellowship. Therefore, effective immediately, you will have your 4 weeks off per year. In addition you may take an additional 3 personal days and 5 sick days. Any additional time taken beyond this must be made up in order to graduate from your fellowship. I would like to be clear that certainly this time is available to you and you may utilize it in its appropriate fashion, but after vacation, personal and 5 sick days the time must be made up before you can graduate from the fellowship program. All time off, regardless of the reason must be submitted in writing on the appropriate form. Conferences South Jersey Heart Group provides conference time. Conferences are to be related to fundamental cardiology and cardiac principles. These conferences are expected to enhance your fundamental knowledge of cardiology as a fellow. All conferences with regard to topic must be discussed with your program director prior to committing to the conference. South Jersey Heart Group will refund $1,500.00 towards the cost of your conference’s travel, meals and hotel. Anything above this amount you will be responsible for. Al receipts must be submitted in total up to that amount prior to reimbursement. South Jersey Heart Group will allow two (2) days of conference time beyond your vacation allotment. If you chose to take a longer conference, vacation time must be used to cover the missed time. Again pre-approval must be obtained by the program director prior to any consideration for reimbursement. You will be allowed to attend one (1) conference per academic year. 62 3001 Chapel Avenue Suite 101 Cherry Hill NJ 08002 FELLOW TIME OFF REQUEST NAME: ______________________________________________ DATE SUBMITTED:__________________________________ DATES REQUESTED: __________________ VACATION PERSONAL COMP DAY SICK DAY __________________ VACATION PERSONAL COMP. DAY SICK DAY __________________ VACATION PERSONAL COMP.DAY SICK DAY __________________ VACATION PERSONAL COMP. DAY SICK DAY FELLOW SIGNATURE:__________________________________________________ Approved:__________________________ Not Approved:______________________ 63 3001 Chapel Avenue Suite 101 Cherry Hill NJ 08002 CONFERENCE REQUEST NAME: ______________________________________________ DATE SUBMITTED:__________________________________ DATES REQUESTED: **TWO WORK DAYS ONLY** __________________ CONFERENCE NAME_____________________________ __________________ CONFERENCE NAME_____________________________ __________________ CONFERENCE NAME_____________________________ FELLOW SIGNATURE:__________________________________________________ Approved:__________________________ Not Approved:______________________ 64 Fellow Dress Code Fellows are expected to maintain the highest professional standards of dress and behavior. At all times the fellows should have a legible name tag and / or hospital identification badge in plain view. You are issued two (2) new lab coats at the beginning of the year. Your lab coats are expected to be clean, neat and pressed at all times. Appropriate male attire includes shirt with tie*, dress pants (no denims), no open- toe shoes / sandals and a white UMDNJ-SOM issued Lab coat with name tag and identification badge in view. Appropriate female attire includes dresses, skirts or dress pants (not denim) with appropriate blouses; no open-toe shoes/ sandals and a white UMDNJ-SOM issued lab coat with name tag and identification badge in plain view. Scrubs are the property of the medical center and are to be worn only when in the respective medical center(s). Scrub suits are not to be worn outside or removed from the medical centers. cleaned on a regular basis to prevent cross-contamination and the transmission of infection ** Please refer to attached policy addendum for complete dress code guidelines.** Kennedy Memorial Hospital – University Medical Center Dress Code Guidelines – Students and House Staff It is the policy of the Kennedy Healthy System that all care givers present a professional appearance. General dress should reflect good judgment and create a favorable, positive image as a representative of the medical profession, SOM and Kennedy Health System. Medical students, interns, residents and fellows are expected to look and dress professionally when in any patient care area. This includes the hospitals, family health center, surgical center, health care center and wound care center. Personal Appearance Guidelines: Kennedy ID badges must be visible at all times \White coats are to be worn at all times in the hospital, even if wearing scrubs Attire, including lab coats, must be clean, pressed and in good condition Clothing that is torn, even if the tear is part of the design, is not acceptable Shoes must be clean and functional for work responsibilities. Closed toe shoes must be word in patient related areas. Clean clogs are acceptable in the OR’s and L and D Hosiery / socks must be worn with all types of shoes in patient related areas Hair, including facial hair, must be neatly trimmed. Specific areas / specialties may restrict the length of hair due to infection control and personal / patient safety Hair longer than shoulder length should be tied back in patient care areas for infection control reasons Men are expected to wear shirts with collars unless wearing scrubs Jewelry may be worn around the neck, wrists, ankles or ears provided it is safe and not excessive. In general, body piercing is not acceptable, but it is recognized that some piercing may have religious / cultural significance and may be tastefully worn Fingernails must be clean, neat and well groomed at all times and kept and ¼ inch in length. Freshly applied, nonchipped nail polish in a soft color is acceptable Artificial nails are not permitted due to their harboring more bacteria than natural nails The following articles of clothing are not acceptable in patient care areas: Blue jeans Tee-Shirts Sweatshirts Halter tops Shorts / Capri pants Shirts with writing on them Sandals or flip-flops Skirts / dresses more than two inches above the knee Any medical student or house staff member who does not adhere to the dress code may be asked to leave the facility by a member of the medical staff, manager or administrator. He/she may return to the facility when the attire meets acceptable standards. 65 ** Program manual addendum 12/14/2007/kmj 66 Corrective Actions Grievance Procedure (as per the CIR contract) 1. 2. 3. Purpose. The purpose of this procedure is to assure prompt, fair and equitable resolution of disputes concerning terms and conditions of employment arising from the administration of the Agreement by providing the sole and exclusive vehicle set forth in this article for adjusting and setting grievances. In no event shall matters concerning academic or medical judgment by the subject of a grievance under the provisions of this article. Matters pertaining to nonreappointment shall be grievable under this agreement only upon this basis of claimed violations involving discriminatory treatment in violation of Discrimination or Article VII, individual contracts. Definition. A grievance is an allegation by housestaff officer of the housestaff organization of the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, an Affiliate of the Committee of Interns and Residents (herinafter referred to as HOUMDNJ/CIR) that there has been: a. A breach, misinterpretation or improper application of he terms of this agreement; or, b. An improper or discriminatory application of, or failure to act pursuant to, the written rules, policies or regulations of the University or statutes to the extent that any of the above established terms and conditions of employment which are matters which intimately and directly affect the work and welfare of housestaff officers and which do not significantly interfere with inherent management prerogatives pertaining to the determination of public policy. Preliminary Informal Procedure. The parties agree that all problems should be resolved, whenever possible, before the filing of a grievance and encourage open communication between the University and the housestaff officer so that resort to the formal grievance procedure will no normally be necessary. A housestaff officer may orally present and discuss a grievance with his or her Chief resident, or with the University’s approval, an appropriate designee, who may, if the circumstances warrant, arrange an informal conference between the appropriate administrator and the grievant. The grievant may, at his or her option, request the presence of a CIR representative during attempts at informal resolution of the grievance. If the housestaff officer exercises this opinion, the administrator may determine that such grievance be moved to the first step. Informal discussion shall not serve to extend the time within which a grievance must be filed, unless such is agree to in writing by the University official responsible for the administration of the first formal step of the grievance procedure. Any disposition of a grievance by a Chief Resident will be subject to confirmation by an appropriate administrator. 4. Formal Steps. a. Step One. If the grievance is not informally resolved, the CIR may file a written request for review with the appropriate Dean or designee within thirty (30) calendar days after the date on which the act(s) occurred or twenty-one (21) calendar days from the date on which the individual housestaff officer should reasonably have known of it’s occurrence. The Dean or designee shall review the grievance and where he or she deems it appropriate, witness may be heard and pertinent records received. The hearing shall be held within fourteen (14) calendar days of receipt of the grievance, and the decision shall be rendered in writing to the housestaff officer within fourteen (14) calendar days following the conclusion of the review. b. Step two. If the CIR is not satisfied with the disposition of he grievance at Step One, the CIR may appeal to the vice-president of human resources or his/her designee within fourteen (14) calendar days of receipt of the step one decision. Hearings must be scheduled within fourteen (14) calendar days, excluding holidays, of receipts of the appeal. The decision shall be rendered in writing to the housestaff officer and the CIR representative within fourteen (14) calendar days from the conclusion of the hearing. If the grievance involves a non-contractual grievance as defined above, the Vice-president for human resources may alternatively within fourteen (14) calendar days of receipt of the appeal, convene a committee described below which shall hear the merits of the grievance and shall deliver its findings to the vice president of human resources within fourteen (14) calendar days following the date of its hearing. The committee shall consist of two (2) members appointed by the housestaff officers who shall be officers with atleast two (2) years of service at the University and three (3) members appointed by the vice president for human resources, one of whom shall be the associate vice president for academic administration or his/her designee who shall serve as chairperson. For the purposes of conducting the housestaff and two (2) members appointed by the vice president for human resources. 67 The vice-president for human resources will review the committee’s recommendation as to the disposition of the grievance and within fourteen days following receipt of the committee’s written report and recommendation render a final and binding decision to the grievant. No complaint informally resolved or grievance resolved at either step one or two shall constitute a precedent for any purposes unless agreed to in writing by the vice president for human resources and CIR acting through its representative. c. Step Three. If the grievance involves a contractual violation of the agreement as Defined above, the CIR may, upon written notification to the vice-president for human resources or his / her designee, appeal he step two decision to arbitration. Said notice must be filed with the public employment relations commission within twenty-one (21) calendar days following receipt of the step two decisions. It must be signed by a CIR representative or official. The arbitrator shall conduct a hearing and investigation to determine the facts and render a decision for the resolution of the grievance. The parties agree that the decision of the arbitrator shall be final and binding. The arbitrator shall neither add to, subtract from, modify, or alter the terms of this agreement or determine any dispute involving the exercise of a management function, which is within the authority of the University as set forth in Article III (management rights). Arbitration shall be confined solely to the application and/or interpretation of this agreement and the precise issue(s) submitted. The arbitrator shall not substitute his or her judgment for academic or medical judgments, nor shall the arbitrator review such decisions except for the purpose of determining whether the decision has violated this agreement. Any cost resulting from this procedure shall be shared equally by the parties. Arbitrators shall be selected, on a case-by-case basis, under the selection procedure of the public employment relations committee. 5. Procedural Rules. a. A grievance must be filed at Step One within twenty-one (21) calendar days from the date on which the act(s) which is the subject of the grievance occurred or twenty-one (21) calendar days from the date on which the individual housestaff officer should reasonably have known of it’s occurrence. b. Where the subject of a grievance suggests it and where the parties mutually agree, such grievance may be initiated at, or moved to, Step Two of this process. c. Time limits provided for in this Article may be extended by written mutual agreement of the parties at the level involved. d. No reprisal of any kind shall be taken against any housestaff officer who participates in this grievance procedure. e. Where a grievance directly concerns and is shared by more than one housestaff officer, such group grievance may, upon mutual agreement properly be initiated at the first level of supervision common to the several grievants. The presentation of such group grievance will be by the appropriate HOUMDNJ/CIR representatives and one of the grievants designated by the HOUMDNJ/CIR. A group grievance may be initiated by the HOUMDNJ/CIR. Where individual grievance concerning the same matter are filed by several gievants, I shall be the option of the university to consolidate such grievances for hearing a group grievance provided the time limitations expressed elsewhere herein are understood to remain unaffected. f. Should a grievance not be satisfactorily resolved, or should the employer not respond timely as prescribed above either after initial receipt of the grievance or after movement of the grievance to Step Two, the grievant may exercise the option within twenty-one (21) calendar days to proceed to the next step. g. If, at any step in the grievance procedure, the university decision is not appealed within the appropriate prescribed time, such grievance will be considered closed and there shall be no further appeal or review. Disciplinary Action (as per the CIR contract) Housestaff officers may be disciplined or discharged for cause. Disciplinary actions shall be grievable, and in the event the involved housestaff officer files a grievance, the burden of proving just cause shall be upon the university. The University shall give five (5) working days advance notice, in writing, of any intended disciplinary action to the affected housestaff officer and the CIR. The notice shall state the nature and the extent of discipline, the specific charges against the housestaff officer and describe the circumstances upon which each charge is based. 68 A housestaff officer whom University has given notice of disciplinary action may be removed from service without (5) working days notice where his/her continued presence is deemed to imperil patient safety, public safety, or the reassignment shall be contained in the University’s written notice of intended disciplinary action. Where a housestaff officer has been removed from service, the University may concurrently remove the housestaff officer from its payroll. If it is later discovered that the housestaff officer was wrongly removed from service, the housestaff officer shall be reinstated with full back pay. In addition, if the housestaff officer, as a result of the wrongful removal from service, is required to work beyond the end of the residency year to complete his or residency, the housestaff officer shall remain on university payroll until such time as the residency has been completed. Appeals of disciplinary actions shall be presented at Step Two of the grievance procedure. Such appeals shall be made within 14 days of receipt of the charges and disciplinary penalty. A hearing must be held within fourteen calendar days, excluding holidays, of receipt of the appeal. The step two decision by the vice president of human resources or his/her designee may be appealed to arbitration by filing with the public employee relations commission. Such an appeal must be filed within twenty-one (21) calendar days of receipt of he written step two decision. Arbitration decisions in disciplinary actions shall be made in accordance with step three of the grievance procedure. The remedy in disciplinary actions will be limited to back pay and/or reinstatement to the housestaff officer’s position. Housestaff officers may not seek post-residency damages under this agreement. However, this agreement shall not preempt or preclude a housestaff officer from seeking appropriate relief for any post-residency damages in any judicial forum or administrative agency. Additional Grievance Policies / Our Lady of Lourdes Medical Center While on service at any of the Our Lady of Lourdes hospital institutions (Camden, Burlington) you will follow all of the practice and procedures outlined in your manual as well as for the institution of Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital. If a grievance arises at Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital, Camden Division, Dr. Jan Weber will be the intermediary regarding this grievance between you and the parties involved. As program director, I certainly will be involved in the process, but Dr. Weber would have final discretion regarding final resolution regarding any grievance. I encourage you to meet with Dr. Weber immediately and to notify this office immediately should a grievance arise. 69 NPI Application: All UMDNJ-SOM cardiology fellows must apply for and receive their NPI number before the end of their first month of fellowship. While this is not currently state mandated, it is ever becoming more and more of a necessity. If you already have an NPI, please give that number to your program coordinator. If you do not, please plan on applying for one. Fellows can apply for their individual NPI number online at: https://nppes.cms.hhs.gov/NPPES/Welcome.do The application is free and should take about 20 minutes to complete and about 10 days to process. For further information, read the attached article. 70 Universal Protocol for the prevention of wrong site, wrong procedure, wrong person surgery KENNEDY MEMORIAL HOSPITALS – UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER Policy: Universal Protocol for the Prevention of Wrong Site, Wrong Procedure, Wrong Person Surgery Manual: Operating Room/Same Day Surgery Function: Patient Care Policy Number: 3.22/324 Implementation Date: April 2000 Last Revision: October 2006 Page: 1 of 8 Author: Distribution: Medical Staff Surgical Services Daniel Herriman Perioperative Nurse Managers Universal Protocol for the Prevention of Wrong Site, Wrong Procedure, Wrong Person Surgery POLICY: The purpose of this policy is to structure the responsibilities of members of the surgical team in preventing wrong-site, wrong procedure, and wrong person surgery. This process involves a pre-operative verification process, marking of the surgical site and a “Time Out” which is done immediately prior to the start of the surgical procedure. It is usually referred to a “Universal Protocol.” Every member of the team has specific responsibilities to prevent errors. PURPOSE: Patient Selection This policy applies to patients undergoing procedures involving right/left distinction, multiple structures (such as fingers or toes), or multiple levels (such as spinal surgery). It is not necessary to mark the surgical area where: The surgical side or level is readily apparent to all operating room personnel because the site has been identifiably marked prior to arriving in the operating room (e.g., breast lumpectomy with pre-operative needle localization). The surgical incision and planned procedure are midline, do not involve spinal segments and are not affected by laterality e.g., thyroidectomy, uvulectomy, mid line sternotomy, Cesarean section and laparotomy and laparoscopy. In endoscopic and laparoscopic procedures where the target site is for organs that are paired, site marking is required to indicate the intended side, even though the site of insertion of the instrument is midline. The patient should be marked near the proposed site or near the proposed incision/insertion site. Cardiac catheterization and other interventional procedures for which the site of insertion is not predetermined. The marking of teeth is also exempt from the site marking requirement BUT, indicate operative tooth name(s) on documentation OR mark the operative tooth (teeth) on the dental radiographs or dental diagram. In spinal surgery where the approach is anterior. (It is encouraged that determination of spinal level be determined intraoperatively) SCOPE: Order requirement – none Consent requirement - none Responsibilities – Surgical Team Approval - None Definition of Terms – none Equipment –none Procedure A. The Operating Surgeon: 1. Key Points To identify the correct surgical/procedure site, the surgeon/physician performing the procedure checks medical records, films, and other indicators of proper surgery site. When appropriate and patient status 71 Procedure permits participation (awake and aware), the surgeon/physician asks the patient to indicate the correct surgical site. 2. After proper identification has taken place, the surgeon/physician performing the procedure marks the surgical site at or near the incision site. The site is to be marked with the physician’s initials. Do Not mark any non-operative site(s) unless necessary for some other aspect of care. 3. Marking may take place in the preoperative area or in the operating room prior to the patient receiving any sedation. 4. Using a surgical marker to sign/initial the operative site of the patient. An “X” is not used to identify the correct or incorrect site. Do not write over pressure sensitive areas (carotid artery) or in cosmetically sensitive areas. It is acceptable to sign in areas immediately adjacent to the surgery site. If a diagnostic imaging study is used to determine the correct site and the patient or record (e.g., the X-ray lacks a right or left mark) does not substantiate the correct site, an X-ray or an image intensifier is used prior to making an incision to verify the site. B. 5. The surgeon is not to proceed with surgery unless the signature is visible after prepping/draping the area for surgery unless it is technically or anatomically impossible or impractical to do so. 6. It is not appropriate to mark the side of the patient that is not to be operated on. Nursing Personnel 1. 2. 3. C. Key Points Blades will be removed from the scrub table and passed off to the circulator when the case is opened. Blades are not to be returned to the table until the time out portion of the universal protocol is completed. If the case does not require a blade no instrumentation is to leave the scrub table until the time out is completed. Other Surgical Team Members As part of the Universal Protocol, it is the responsibility of the surgical team to conduct a “Time Out” prior to the initiation of the procedure. The process takes place with every member of the surgical team (Surgeon, Anesthesiologist/Anesthetist, Circulating Nurse, Scrub Nurse, and Resident if present). Time out is to be conducted immediately prior to incision or initiation of the surgery or procedure. All activity ceases in the OR/Procedure room while the time out is being conducted. 1. The universal protocol is conducted utilizing the medical record and the patient identification band. 2. The surgical permit is reviewed and the patient is identified by name and medical record number against patient identification band. 3. The team will confirm laterality, multiple structures or levels and the signature/initials of the operating surgeon at the proper site. 4. The team will confirm procedure to be performed is the 72 Procedure correct procedure. D. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 5. The team will confirm that the patient’s position is correct. 6. Review of the chart will include review of the patient allergies. The statement of “no known allergies” will be used or the allergies that the patient has identified will be reviewed as part of this process. 7. The circulating nurse is responsible for confirming with the surgeon the availability of correct implants and any equipment or special requirements. Key Points Anesthesia Department 1. Anesthesiologist/ Anesthetist administer anesthetic agents only after the correct site has been marked by the surgeon’s signature/initials. Special Considerations for Spinal Surgery The Operating Surgeon 1. Reviews all necessary documents that indicate the level at which to operate. 2. For posterior approaches, marks the operative site with a radiographically visible marker and positions the patient on the operative table. 3. Obtains and interprets pre-incision radiographs to assure the proper operative level and exposure. 4. Uses reliable techniques to again identify the level intraoperatively: Exposes the lamina at the operative site. Marks the intended level using an instrument or clip at the level of the exposed lamina. Performs an intra-operative spinal radiograph to determine the exact location and level. Personally interprets the X-ray with the marking in place Indelibly marks the site using a cautery, stitch, or “bone bite” before moving the X-ray marker. 5. The orthopedic and radiology departments will collaborate in implementing using a consistent “level” terminology. The preferred terminology will define spinal interspaces by their upper and lower limits (e.g. “L3-4”, not “L3”) when reporting all spinal levels. E. Discrepancies A discrepancy at any point in time must stop the case from proceeding until resolved. All team members and patient (if possible) must agree on the resolution to the identified discrepancy. The discrepancy and resolution must be documented by the registered nurse. F. Special Considerations For ophthalmology surgery a site mark will be made adjacent to the eye and must be visible after the patient is prepped and draped. Adhesive markers must only be used as an adjunct to the site marking. 73 Procedure Adhesive markers may be applied when team members need to perform a treatment (i.e. anesthesia block) or medication administration prior to site marking and should follow the patient identification process. In the case of a surgical emergency, a site mark maybe omitted, but a surgical "time out" should be performed unless the risk outweighs the benefit. If a patient refuses to have the site marked, the patient's physician will review with the patient the rationale for site marking. If the patient still refuses site marking, the physician will document this in the medical record. The patient's operative/procedure consent will be validated with the patient as to right procedure and right site in place of marking. This document will then be used during the surgical "time out" to validate correct site. Key Points AGE SPECIFIC TECHNICAL CONSIDERATIONS: None DOCUMENTATION: None REFERENCES: 1. Administrative Decision ORIGINAL APPROVAL DATE : April 2000 REVIEW DATES Annually through December 2005 REVISION DATES: January 2005, October 2006 APPROVAL OF REVISIONS: Perioperative Management Committee Service Line Committee, Perioperative Services 74 UMDNJ-SOM / South Jersey Heart Group P.C. Cardiology Fellowship Manual, updated, June 30th, 2009. ______________________________ John N. Hamaty, D.O., FACC, FACOI Program Director ______________________ June 30th, 2009 __________________________ Kate Jurman, CMA Program Coordinator _____________________ June 30th, 2009 75