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PathologyPathology

Northwestern McGaw offers fully accredited residency programs in anatomic pathology (AP) and clinical pathology (CP) based at Northwestern Memorial Hospital. Candidates may choose a residency in AP or CP with experimental pathology or a combined program of AP/CP.

The residency program seeks to educate pathologists with expertise in a subspecialty area, an understanding of current research, and a commitment to lifelong learning.

Training Program

Residents fully participate in the department’s mission of service, scholarship, and teaching. The program emphasizes graded responsibility, with increasing independence and expectations as the trainee develops into a competent practitioner. Structured formal teaching, including didactic lectures, unknown slide conferences, and case-based teaching, covers all areas of modern pathology practice.

To become effective clinical consultants, pathology residents in each laboratory play an integral role in the day-to-day patient care activities of the laboratory, including administration and supervision.

Teaching is an essential function of the pathologist in the form of didactic lectures to medical students or effective consultations with clinicians.  Residents have many opportunities to develop their teaching skills in clinical conferences and medical student laboratories

Research

The Department of Pathology also offers a research residency program for individuals with extensive research experience (for example, graduates of MD/PhD programs). The schedules for research residents are tailored to their individual clinical and research goals with the expectation that they will achieve board eligibility in either AP or CP. The department makes arrangements for them to conduct research in various University laboratories.

Residents entering the program are encouraged to participate in departmental research projects. This experience teaches them how to critically analyze the medical literature and serves as a basis for understanding the relationship between basic science and patient care. Most residents completing the program have published at least one research paper.

Residents may choose from a number of diverse areas, including molecular mechanisms of peroxisome proliferator–induced pleiotropic responses, receptor-mediated mechanisms of liver cancer, role of ß-galactoside binding mammalian lectins in kidney development, structure and functional maintenance of glomerular basement membrane integrity, function and regulation of cadherin-based intercellular adhesive junctions in development and differentiation and their role in cancer and blistering autoimmune diseases of the epidermis, mechanisms of urinary bladder carcinogenesis, mechanisms of myelination and autoimmune demyelination, molecular and immunobiologic aspects of Chagas disease and the parasite Trypanosoma cruzi, and molecular basis of protein phospholipid interactions, molecular aspects of programmed cell death, evaluation of the role of biologic heterogeneity in chronic lymphocytic leukemia clinical outcome, molecular testing methods to enhance microbial infection control activities, and elucidation of the mechanisms of antimicrobial drug resistance in enterococci and Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

Facilities

Northwestern Memorial and Children's Memorial Hospitals contribute more than 400 autopsies, 32,000 surgical specimens, 32,000 cytology cases, and more than 4 million laboratory procedures to the residency program.

Full-time faculty members supervise residents and direct all laboratories, which are fully staffed with technical and supporting personnel. Research laboratories in the hospitals and medical school include facilities for electron microscopy, quantitative microscopy, molecular biology, flow cytometry and cell sorting, and transgenic and gene knock-out procedures.
Adequate support and animal care facilities are readily available.

Positions Offered

A total of 22 residents are available for PGY1-IV. Anatomic pathology and clinical pathology residency programs encompass all major subspecialty areas. Subspecialty postdoctoral fellowships are available for exceptionally qualified residents. Foreign medical graduates must achieve a score of 80 or better on the ECFMG examination or a scaled score of at least 80 on each portion of the USMLE and pass the English language examination.

The Department of Pathology participates in the Integrated Graduate Program in the Life Sciences at the medical school. This interdisciplinary program is open to qualified undergraduates, medical students, and residents.


Department Chair

William Muller, MD, PhD
Magerstadt Professor and Chairman of Pathology

Anjana V. Yeldandi, MD
Residency Program Director

Faculty from Affiliated Hospital Services

Elizabeth J. Perlman, MD
Children's Memorial Hospital

For more information, contact Residency Program Director Anjana Yeldandi, MD, Department of Pathology, Northwestern University, Feinberg School of Medicine, 303 East Chicago Avenue, Ward 6-204, Chicago, Illinois 60611-3008, 312/503-8144; fax 312/503-8249 or visit the Department of Pathology Web site.

E-mail: path-residency@northwestern.edu

 

This page last updated on ­May 25, 2008 7:04 PM 


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