Brown University
History
The Brown Residency Program is proud to be the first Ivy League Emergency Medicine training program established. Our primary teaching site is Rhode Island Hospital, a Level I Trauma Center, accredited stroke center, and regional tertiary care academic medical center. Rhode Island Hospital is home to one of the busiest Emergency Departments in the US, and over 106,000 patients came through the ED doors last year. Our ED is also among the top ten busiest trauma registries in the US.
In addition to the rich clinical experience at RIH, we have 2 additional training sites located on our campus, Hasbro Children’s Hospital, and Women and Infants Hospital. Hasbro Children’s is a Level I Trauma Center, a leading pediatric specialty hospital, and the region’s only center for pediatric critical care. Women and Infants is the region’s main resource for women’s health and specialty newborn care. Our final training site and community affiliate, The Miriam Hospital, has an annual census of close to 60,000 visits, and is located less than 3 miles from our Trauma Center. All of our training sites boast superb clinical and educational opportunities in large volume and high acuity settings.
We have an accredited Sim center, procedure labs, and opportunities to explore niches such as Ultrasound, Critical Care, Global Health, EMS, Research, and Sex & Gender in EM. We focus on professional development, leadership, mentorship, & are well funded for research, international medicine, and wellness. Interns start with EM Orientation, and we are mindful of the balance between a rigorous clinical training schedule and a life outside of medicine, with abundant resources and support for our residents to succeed.
Other benefits include a generously funded Residency Wellness/Retreat Budget; iPads; Professional development opportunities protected and funded for residents, including national (AAEM, ACEP, CORD, EMRA, SAEM) and regional conference attendance, Leadership and Advocacy conference attendance, CPC attendance, Orientation events, leadership development at all levels, and additional career development for PGY4s. Membership dues for ACEP, CORD, EMRA, SAEM, as well as supplemental educational materials, such as Board review materials, a book allowance, and more, fully funded.
Leadership
- Department Chair: Brian Zink, MD
- Program Director: Jessica L. Smith, MD, FACEP
- Associate Program Director: Robert Tubbs, MD
- Assistant Program Director: Jane Preotle, MD
- Assistant Program Director: Dina Himelfarb, MD
- Research Director: Gregory Jay, MD
Training Locations
Primary Teaching Hospital
Rhode Island Hospital: A Level 1 Trauma Center
Additional Training Sites
Hasbro Children's Hospital: A Level 1 Pediatric Trauma Center
The Miriam Hospital: A Community EM affiliate (also staffed by BrownEM faculty), 3.4 miles from RIH
Additional Training sites
Women and Infants Hospital (for OB/GYN)
Newport Hospital (for 2 weeks of Community EM/local Elective)
Curriculum
PGY1
4 week rotation blocks:
- Orientation
- ED X 3
- IMFU (This is Internal Medicine Follow Up: a unique hybrid of EM shifts with real time inpatient follow up on the medicine wards with an EM Faculty Member)
- Pediatric ED
- Medical ICU (MICU)
- Trauma ICU (TICU)
- Pediatric ICU (PICU)
- Orthopedics
- Miriam ED
- OB/GYN
- Anesthesia/US
3 weeks of vacation
PGY2
Month-long rotation blocks start on the first of the month:
- ED X 5
- Miriam ED
- Trauma X 2
- CCU
- Plastic Surgery
- PEMFU (This is Pediatric Emergency Medicine Follow Up: a unique hybrid of Pediatric EM shifts with real time inpatient follow up on the pediatric wards with a Pediatric EM Faculty Member)
- Toxicology/Elective
3 weeks of vacation
PGY3
Month-long rotation blocks start on the first of the month:
- ED X 7
- ED/Pedi Anesthesia
- MICU
- Trauma
- EMS/EM Radiology
- Elective
Pediatric ED shifts continue throughout the year
3 weeks of vacation
PGY4
Month-long rotation blocks start on the first of the month:
- ED X 9
- Elective X 3
Pediatric ED shifts continue throughout the year
4 weeks of vacation
Electives
Residents are free to choose any elective experience in the US or Abroad to round out their training experience.
Through the EM Division of Global Health, residents also receive funding to cover international travel expenses.
Fellowships
- Disaster Medicine
- Emergency Medical Services
- Global Health/International Emergency Medicine
- Injury Prevention
- Medical Education
- Pediatric Emergency Medicine
- Research
- Sex and Gender in Emergency Care
- Simulation
- Ultrasound
Contact Information
Residency Coordinator: Laura Berluti
Email: emresidency@lifespan.org
Phone: (401) 444-6489
Fax: (401) 444-6662
Home Page
http://www.brownemresidency.org/
