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During the first year of fellowship, each fellow at Duke is exposed to delivery room resuscitation, ventilatory management, and intensive care of sick neonates, as well as the convalescent care of recovering infants. In addition, the fellow jointly manages neonatal surgical patients and patients referred to Duke from outside pediatricians, perinatologists and obstetricians. These skills are enhanced as the fellow becomes more independent during the second and third years.
Excellent clinical care depends on a broad knowledge of the underlying physiology, pathophysiology, and clinical literature. Weekly lectures, journal clubs, clinical conferences, core readings, and discussions help build a broad based fund of knowledge in neonatal medicine. During clinical training, the fellow learns the leadership skills needed to supervise a busy intensive care unit with house staff, neonatal nurse practitioners, and respiratory care specialists. In addition, the fellow participates in unit administration which includes problem identification and solutions. There is a weekly Neonatal Medical Ethics Case presentation run by the Head of Medical Ethics of Duke.
There is a broad range of lectures & seminar series available to more than meet Board and ACGME Core Curriculum requirements including Curriculum Design; Teaching Skills; Comprehensive Introduction to Clinical Research; Molecular Biology Techniques; Introduction to Evidence-Based Medicine, Grant Writing Seminar; and Medical Ethics. Masters level programs are available to our fellows & include the Clinical Research & Medical Genomics Training Programs, and Masters program in Biomedical Engineering.
The new Intensive Care Nursery at Duke provides care for babies who are admitted with a wide variety of illnesses and congenital abnormalities. There are 38 intensive care beds at Duke and 54 transitional beds spread between Duke (12) and it's affiliates Durham Regional Hospital (18) and Alamance Regional Medical Center (12).
All pediatric medical and surgical subspecialties are available at Duke. During the clinical rotations, fellows provide leadership and oversight of the bedside care team under the direct guidance of a faculty member. The fellows assist in the training of more junior residents and interns during their ICN rotations, and provide consultations for prenatal visits arranged with obstetrical colleagues.
All fellows participate in the administrative activities of the division.
As fellows become more senior in training, they are given more clinical leadership
responsibilities. The first and second year fellows coordinate joint conferences
and lead discussions at patient care conferences. The senior fellows attend
the weekly executive administrative meeting in the Unit and actively participate
in the development of health care plans and problem solving activities. Approximately 1-2 months of the senior year are spent as "junior attending" on resident team. During that time the fellow rounds with the team and later a faculty member.
Early in training, and throughout the fellowship, trainees are given the opportunity to identify infants in the NICU who they would like to follow in clinic. The distribution of patients should include extremely low birthweight infants, infants with known intracranial injury and full term infants with respiratory failure.
For fellows interested in more extensive training in neurodevelopmental follow-up and outcome research, a specialized clinical research track is available. This track of the training program includes electives in neuroimaging, pulmonary, neurology, rehabilitation, PT/OT, speech/feeding and fetal maternal medicine. It also includes the opportunity to participate in ongoing outcome research and original follow-up studies in the Special Infant Care Clinic. For more information see: Track II- Clinical Research- Neurodevelopmental Follow-up and Outcomes Research.
The neonatology fellows also have a rotation in the Cardiac Intensive Care Unit. This rotation is primarily to provide the experience and oversight of the care of postoperative cardiac surgery and ECMO patients. There are over three hundred pediatric cardiac operations performed per year at Duke. During this rotation, the fellow supervises and manages care of pediatric intensive care patients under the direction of senior Cardiac/PICU faculty. Fellows further their central vascular access skills and ventilatory management of neonates with cardiac disorders.
There is a strong relationship between Pediatric Cardiology & Neonatology, and a full cardiology experience for neonatology fellows is available. This includes a seminar series & postoperative cardiac surgery experience with joint management of cardiology patients admitted to the ICN pre and postoperatively.
In addition, there is a joint research and educational program focusing
on the use of echo cardiography by the neonatologist.
Neonatal fellows participate in National ECMO certification course given at the National Children's Hospital in Washington, D.C.
During the fellowship years, there is a rotation within the Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine in order to gain expertise in prenatal diagnosis, diagnostic ultrasound, prenatal genetic counseling, and multi-disciplinary consultations for complex cases. There is a weekly case conference held between Neonatal Medicine, Maternal-Fetal Medicine, and Obstetric Anesthesiology to discuss upcoming cases and management. In addition, fellows attend a monthly fetal board case review and are responsible for perinatal counseling under the direction of the neonatal and obstetric faculty.
Fellowship Links:
a) Clinical Training:
b) Research Training:
c) Current Fellows:
d) Fellow Publications:
To refer a patient,
24 hours a day:
Ask for the neonatologist on call at:
1-800-MED-DUKE (1-800-633-3853)
or dial the pager directly at: (919) 970-1714.
Phone (919) 668-1592
Fax (919) 681-6065
