Conferences

Morning Report

Morning report occurs 2 to 3 times a week and allows residents to present cases and think critically to form differential diagnoses and management plans for patients.

Grand Rounds

Grand Rounds features a variety of state-of-the-art topics presented by our own expert faculty, visiting professors, national, and international speakers.

Didactic Conferences

The curriculum is based on the American Board of Pediatrics Content Specifications and is used as an adjunct to board preparation. Each 4-week period covers a specific subspecialty or organ system to help focus resident study. Interactive didactic sessions are given by general pediatric attendings, sub-specialists and guest speakers.

 

Adverse Event Didactic (AED)

In the Adverse Event Didactic conference, residents review an adverse event and discuss root cause analysis in an educational setting with the goal of improving patient safety and patient care. Faculty moderate the session.

Health Equity Conferences

TRAIN Health Equity (Teaching Residents Anti-Racism and Investigating and Navigating Health Equity) is a monthly case-based conference led by residents with faculty input on topics surrounding health equity and disparities in medical care. Topics include racism, implicit bias, micro-aggressions, social determinants of health, immigrant health, health literacy, cultural competency, women in medicine, and limited English proficiency.

Outpatient Curriculum Topics

The resident on the Medical Education rotation presents outpatient curriculum topics in a case-based question/answer format with clinic faculty in attendance.

Evidence-Based Medicine

In the Evidence-Based Medicine curriculum, a pre-designated group of residents select a recent paper from the pediatric literature, present the article, and facilitate audience discussion. The program director moderates the discussion and attending physicians provide clinical context.

Quality Improvement

Residents learn about quality improvement through didactic sessions once a quarter. Sessions introduce core concepts of quality improvement and guide residents through their quality improvement projects.

 

Board Preparation

We take the General Pediatrics Certifying Exam (the Boards) very seriously. We have an excellent patient volume that fosters experiential learning at the bedside, which has been shown to be the most effective way to pass the boards. Additionally, we have a Board Preparation Curriculum comprised of the following:

In Training Exams

All residents take the American Board of Pediatrics In-Training Exam in July each year. This exam simulates the Boards and guides the residents in creating their study plans.

PREP Questions

Residents complete weekly PREP questions through a web-based test-taking platform and are provided immediate feedback. Questions follow the organ system of the month discussed during the corresponding didactic conferences. Additionally, residents complete a block of questions in one sitting every quarter to mimic a typical testing environment. Quarterly PREP question blocks are reviewed quarterly by an attending during a dedicated conference.

Board Review Didactic Block

During May and June each academic year, we run our Board Review Didactic Block. Conferences are dedicated to reviewing questions, high-yield content, and discussing test-taking strategies. Residents answer questions in real-time using polling software, and faculty discuss the answers.

 

Scholarly Activity

Residents participate in scholarly activity in two main ways: Research and Quality Improvement. Residents have presented at national and regional conferences including the American Academy of Pediatrics National Conference, Pediatric Academic Societies, Childhood Arthritis and Rheumatology Research Alliance, Society of Critical Care Medicine Annual Congress, North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition Annual Meeting, American Society of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology Conference, American Thoracic Society Conference, American Medical Society for Sports Medicine, Florida Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics (FCAAP) Conference, Florida Perinatal Quality Collaborative, the Orlando Health Quality Retreat, and the APH/WPH Research Symposium, among others.

Research

Residents have the option to participate in research. Residents have completed prospective studies, retrospective studies, case series, and case reports during their training.

Quality Improvement

Residents participate in a Quality Improvement Curriculum during their residency, which incorporates Institute of Healthcare Improvement modules, didactic lectures, focused mentoring, and a Quality Improvement Project. Residents present their project formally during their PGY3 year.

Recent resident-led QI projects include:

  • Increasing Inhaled Corticosteroids Prescriptions for Pediatric Patients with Uncontrolled Persistent Asthma Discharged from the Orlando Health Arnold Palmer Hospital Emergency Department
  • Improving Screening for Sudden Cardiac Arrest in Adolescents during Well-Child Visits at the Orlando Health Primary Care Pediatrics Clinic
  • Improving Iron Supplementation in Premature Infants in the Orlando Health Primary Care Pediatrics Clinic
  • Reducing Hospital Length of Stay and Antibiotic Exposure among Well-Appearing Febrile Neonates
  • Implementation of Appropriate Follow up Care for Adolescents Who Screen Positive and Meet DSM-V Criteria for Depression in the Orlando Health Primary Care Pediatrics Clinic
  • Improving Breastfeeding Rates Through Prenatal Classes and Assessing the Impact of Introduction to Lactation Services
  • Aquadex, It's What's Aqua-Next
  • Improving Influenza Immunization Rates in Patients at Risk for Immunosuppression in the Outpatient Pediatric Rheumatology Setting
  • Improving Resident Continuity of Care in the Orlando Health Primary Care Pediatrics Clinic
  • Increasing Extended Dwell Peripheral Intravenous (EPIV) Use by the NICU Resident Team

 

Other Curricula

Simulation

To improve resident response, comfort level and competency with commonly encountered scenarios, residents are involved in multidisciplinary high-fidelity simulation while on various inpatient units.

Communication Workshops

This series includes the Breaking Bad News (BBN) workshop, which incorporates professional actors as standardized patients to prepare residents to effectively engage in difficult conversations with patients and families. Residents also participate in the Facilitating Attuned Interactions (FAN) curriculum through the Erikson Institute.

Wellness

The Wellness Curriculum is composed of special didactic sessions, class retreats, meetings with our physician coaches, group activities outside of the hospital, and a Humanism Curriculum. For more information regarding wellness, visit our Wellness page.