1 / 23

West Virginia University

West Virginia University. Ophthalmology Residency Program. PGY-2. Allison Bardes Alex Voldman Alex Whittington. PGY-3. Blake Forcina Chris Groat Brian McMillan. PGY-4. Lauren DiGiovine Priyanka Jain Julia Polat. Fellows. Retina Fellow Frank Ruda Oculoplastics Fellow

eadoin
Download Presentation

West Virginia University

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. West Virginia University Ophthalmology Residency Program

  2. PGY-2 • Allison Bardes • Alex Voldman • Alex Whittington

  3. PGY-3 • Blake Forcina • Chris Groat • Brian McMillan

  4. PGY-4 • Lauren DiGiovine • Priyanka Jain • Julia Polat

  5. Fellows • Retina Fellow • Frank Ruda • Oculoplastics Fellow • Laura Gadzala

  6. Program Director • Geoffrey Bradford, MD

  7. Faculty • 2 Comprehensive • Drs. Moore and Morrison • 1 Neuro • Dr. Ellis • 4 Retina • Drs. Leys, Miller, Kesen, and Ghorayeb • 4 Glaucoma • Drs. Charlton, Gross, Mitchell, and Realini • 2 Plastics • Drs. Sivak and Nguyen • 2 Peds • Drs. Bradford and Bonsall • 1 Cornea • Dr. Wiley

  8. Faculty • Contact Lens • Drs. Goellner and Pasinski • Research • Drs. Odom, Ramamurthy and Sokolov • Low Vision • Rebecca Coakley

  9. Typical Day • 7am – Lecture (Wednesday Grand Rounds) • Daytime obligations – Clinic, OR, or VA • Yearly schedule consists of 2 month blocks of all basic rotations • First year: Cornea, Plastics, Neuro x 2, Peds, Consults • Second year: VA x 2, Peds, Consults, Retina, Plastics • Third year: VA x 2, Cornea, Retina, Glaucoma x 2

  10. Things that matter but you don’t want to ask • Salary • $54,169-$57,037 • Call • Transitioning to a q6 schedule with first and second years sharing first call and third years as back up (with fellows and faculty) • Life outside of work • Yes, it does exist • “Book money” • 1st year – BCSC series (talks of getting this digitally in the future) • 2nd year – San Antonio review course (1 wk to prepare for OKAPs) • 3rd year – AAO (New Orleans in 2017)

  11. Things that matter, cont. • Perks • Borrow lenses during residency • Meal cards – $675 at WVU, $10/day at VA (or, unlimited ) • Free parking • Free gym in Eye Institute • Ophthoquestions.com • Vacation • 15 days per year + holidays • 5 more days available for meetings/conferences • 3rd year – 5 additional days for interviews

  12. VA • Louis A. Johnson VA Medical Center; ~45 min drive • Second and third years • Comprehensive and subspecialty clinics throughout the week • OR days on Thursday • Typically ~7 cataract cases per day • Second years do at least 2 per week

  13. Surgical Simulator • Cataract and vitreoretinal interfaces

  14. Surgical Experience # = Surgeon (#) = Assistant Surgeon

  15. Graduates 2000-2013 35 Graduates 17 Comprehensive 18 Subspecialty 6 Retina 5 Cornea 3 OPRS 2 Pediatrics 1 Glaucoma 1 Uveitis

  16. Morgantown, WV • 10 Great Places to Live, 2013 • Kiplinger rated Morgantown #7 • Population: 129,709 (metro area) • Unemployment rate: 4.2% • Median household income: $42,100 • Median home value: $161,000 • What the locals love: Rowing lessons at the boathouse in the city's Wharf District and dining at outdoor cafés along the Mon River Rail-Trail. • Even during the economic downturn of 2008-2010, Morgantown was one of the few metropolitan areas in the country that saw job and income growth, thanks mostly to Mylan Pharmaceuticals, a leading manufacturer of generic drugs, and West Virginia University (WVU) and the WVU Healthcare system. The city's unemployment rate remains well below the national average. • Morgantown offers a host of cultural activities, from Broadway shows to art exhibitions. Outdoor recreation is abundant. Locals head to the Mon River Rail-Trail to run or bike, or drive 13 miles to Coopers Rock State Forest for 50 miles of hiking trails. Unlike much of West Virginia, Morgantown, located in the north-central part of the Mountain State, is within a few hours' drive of several major cities, including Pittsburgh and Washington, D.C. Residents don't need to leave town, though, for good health care. WVU Hospitals are highly rated in specialties including cancer and cardiology. • Living alongside 30,000 college students can have its drawbacks. During the school year, traffic through town starts backing up around 2 p.m. And if you're not a fan of Mountaineer football, don't tell. Housing costs in Morgantown are above-average for the state -- expect to pay $200,000 or more for an updated, three-bedroom house. But local property taxes are low. And local schools such as Suncrest Primary and Middle schools, Cheat Lake Elementary and Morgantown High School are top-rated.

  17. Coopers Rock

  18. Cheat Lake

More Related