Curriculum
Didactics are held every Wednesday morning on a weekly basis. Didactic topics include lectures from faculty in all orthopedic subspecialties as well as a yearly OITE review series. Lectures include everything from basic science, anatomy and surgical approaches, physical exam, orthopedic implants, and case discussions.
Grand Rounds are held every Friday morning on a weekly basis. Grand Round presentations include lectures from Baylor Faculty, visiting faculty, and residents. We complete Morbidity and Mortality Conference once a month.
We are privileged to have various subspecialty Journal Clubs on a near Monthly Basis. Journal clubs include all residents and attendings who represent that subspecialty.
Individual rotations will have specific subspecialty lectures and conferences, some examples include:
- Foot and Ankle Conference, weekly
- Hand Case Conference, weekly
- Pediatric Orthopedics Indications Conference, weekly
- Spine Case Conference, weekly
- Sports Medicine Conference, weekly
- Total Joints Case Conference, weekly
Call Assignments/On-Call Duties
Ben Taub
- PGY-1 In-house day call 6 a.m. - 6 p.m. Monday-Friday
- PGY-2 In-house junior call 6 a.m. - 6 p.m. Weekdays. 24 hour call weekends
- Senior resident (PGY 3-4) Home call
General
- Baylor St. Luke’s Medical Center at McNair and Michael E. DeBakey Veterans Affairs Medical Center
- Four to five in-house primary calls (PGY 2-4)
Texas Children’s Hospital
- Baylor in-house (PGY 2-4) residents
- Seven to eight calls per month per resident
- Composed of residents assigned to Texas Children’s Hospital only
- Call pool includes residents from University of Texas Medical Branch and Houston Methodist
Chief Resident Call
- One week out of six weeks
Resident Mentorship Program
All junior level residents (PGY-1 and PGY-2) are assigned a senior-level resident (PGY-3 and PGY-4) mentor. The mentors are usually paired with the junior residents on the rotation schedule as well. This buddy system has been extremely effective for our residency training program. Residents are very comfortable in communicating with each other on the continual rigors of orthopedic training, as well as life outside of residency training. PGY-1 residents are initially assigned a PGY-3 resident mentor and these residents remain paired through the end of the PGY-2 year. Once that resident completes his or her PGY-2 year, they then become a mentor at the start of their PGY-3 year to an incoming PGY-1 resident.
Faculty Mentorship Program
Not only are the junior residents given a resident mentor, but all trainees are assigned a faculty mentor for the duration of the residency training upon starting the program. This mentor acts as a liaison for the resident to the program director and chair. This faculty mentor also guides and advises the assigned resident on progression within the program and counsels when necessary. Resident mentees also rely on their mentors for career planning after residency.
| July | Aug. | Sept. | Oct. | Nov. | Dec. | Jan. | Feb. | March | April | May | June | |
| PGY-1 | VA | EM | Ben Taub | NSGY | Pediatrics | Vascular | VA | TSICU | Ben Taub | Rad/Rheum | Pediatrics | PRS |
| PGY-2 | Limb Reconstruction | Pediatrics | Hand | Spine | VA | Hand/Foot and Ankle | ||||||
| PGY-3 | Hand | Oncology | Sports | Ben Taub | Joints | Pediatrics | ||||||
| PGY-4 | Pediatrics Chief | Sports | Spine Chief | Foot and Ankle | Ben Taub | VA | ||||||
| PGY-5 | Ben Taub Chief | Ben Taub Sports | VA Chief | VA Sports | Elective | Private Trauma | ||||||