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1 sociated with decreased odds of matching for fellowship.
2 s impact on personal and patient care during fellowship.
3 an Edinburgh Clinical Academic Training PhD Fellowship.
4 titute for Health Research Academic Clinical Fellowship.
5 Wellcome Trust Clinical Research Training Fellowship.
6 onal Agency for Research on Cancer-Australia Fellowship.
7 an Society of Transplant Surgeons-accredited fellowship.
8 edical School Pharmaceutical Policy Research Fellowship.
9 al do Nivel Superior (Brazil), and Fulbright Fellowship.
10 of Health and Burroughs Wellcome Fund/ASTMH Fellowship.
11 is feasible within a maternal-fetal medicine fellowship.
12 ntext of an existing maternal-fetal medicine fellowship.
13 ency physicians who complete a critical care fellowship.
14 rd Foundation, and the Stanford Earth Dean's Fellowship.
15 amme, India Alliance Wellcome DBT Margdarshi Fellowship.
16 hildren with Cancer UK Davidson and O'Gorman Fellowship.
17 097377/Z/11/Z and the Daniel Turnberg Travel Fellowship.
18 vide ongoing maintenance training as part of fellowship.
19 ama at Birmingham, and the Queensland Health Fellowship.
20 ational Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship.
21 ents applying for procedural or Mohs surgery fellowships.
22 ternal medicine subspecialties and adult CCM fellowships.
23 culated to accredited US infectious diseases fellowships.
24 ally invasive (MIS), and 12 Endocrine (Endo) fellowships.
25 idencies and multidisciplinary critical care fellowships.
26 e rapid growth of specialty and subspecialty fellowships.
29 among recent transplant surgeons (completed fellowship 2000-2004) and former young surgeons (complet
31 heir residency in the US and 96% completed a fellowship (25% vitreoretinal surgery, 22% cornea and ex
32 for the annual entry into pediatric surgery fellowships (28, 34, and 56) are modeled and their effec
33 he current entry rate into pediatric surgery fellowships (34 per year) will result in a slowing of gr
35 n during training were more likely to pursue fellowship (87.5%) than those who did not (66.7%)(P < .0
36 58.8% vs 22.4%, P = .010), consider quitting fellowship (94.1% vs 20.7%, P < .001), or make a medical
38 nesthesia have accredited fellowships, and a fellowship accreditation application is under review for
39 ction of Adult Cardiothoracic Anesthesiology fellowship accreditation by the American College of Grad
42 In addition to the many research awards and fellowships already sponsored by the NSRG and the AADR,
43 ons in the first 5 years after completion of fellowship among recent transplant surgeons (completed f
44 jority of the residents would not consider a fellowship and did not want to interpret mammograms in t
48 l Fellow, accomplishments achieved after the fellowship, and current activities are included here.
50 nd cardiothoracic anesthesia have accredited fellowships, and a fellowship accreditation application
52 t and 2 pediatric programs offered adult CHD fellowships, and only 31 adult and 11 pediatric fellows
53 was no supervision or accreditation of these fellowships, and they varied widely in content, structur
54 itical care within a maternal-fetal medicine fellowship appears promising and could be implemented el
58 dermatology residents preparing for surgery fellowships are highly skilled in performing elliptical
59 ondents rated overall quality of teaching in fellowship as either "good" (37%) or "excellent" (44%),
60 He subsequently went on to residency and fellowship at Children's Hospital Boston where he contin
61 Harvard Medical School, the Norman E Zinberg Fellowship at Harvard Medical School, and the Doris and
62 opean Commission (Marie Curie Intra-European Fellowship), Australian National Health and Medical Rese
66 negatively impact GSR case volumes and that fellowship-bound residents (FBR) preferentially seek out
69 a job opportunity (P < 0.001) and that their fellowship choice was influenced by their gender (P < 0.
71 sidency programs with and without coexisting Fellowships, comparing caseloads for FBR and all GSR and
72 Surgeon-years in practice since residency/fellowship completion explained 19.2% of the surgeon var
74 on of University Professors of Ophthalmology Fellowship Compliance Committee (AUPO FCC) provides stan
76 in, global assessment survey designed by the Fellowship Council research committee was electronically
78 ve queries (>100) and critical care medicine fellowship director and advanced practice nursing educat
79 l Medicine Certification Examination scores, fellowship director ratings of medical knowledge, and de
81 202), USMLE Step 3 scores (beta = .130), and fellowship directors' medical knowledge ratings (beta =
82 dents, and those who successfully complete a fellowship do not have access to a U.S. certification ex
85 to pay the 634 trainees who perform research fellowships each year, the majority of which is paid for
89 of Health (NIH) extramural grant, residency, fellowship, faculty, and geographic data, to 109 individ
92 enomic integration platform developed by the Fellowship for Interpretation of Genomes as a component
99 Critical end points included completion of a fellowship, general surgery practice, and practice setti
100 eanor and Miles Harvard Medical School Shore Fellowship Grant, and Massachusetts General Hospital, DA
102 phthalmology residents who were matched into fellowships had higher step 1 (difference: 9; 99% confid
104 al Society of North America (RSNA) Editorial Fellowship has been offering unique opportunities to rad
105 in applications for infectious diseases (ID) fellowships has been an area of active introspection for
106 hment of guidelines in various ophthalmology fellowships has been generally accepted as a method to e
112 or International Cancer Research, Jason Boas Fellowship, Imperial Biomedical Research Centre, Rosetre
113 ty-five (64%) residents would not consider a fellowship in breast imaging if offered, and 133 (63%) w
114 utes of Health, the Helmut Wolfgang Schumann Fellowship in Preventive Medicine at Harvard Medical Sch
116 of surgical trainees who perform a research fellowship in the middle of residency subsequently becom
117 controlling the numbers of pediatric surgery fellowships in a way that recognizes problems with distr
118 en an increase in the number of postgraduate fellowships in minimally invasive and gastrointestinal (
120 sidency, or training programs (residency and fellowship) in the combined and separate AAN and ANA net
122 d how their experience and learning from the fellowship influenced and contributed to their academic
123 Interrupting residency to perform a research fellowship is a common and costly practice among general
125 ged the relevant discrepancy with regard to "fellowship" issues (e.g., taxation to reduce economic in
126 ted States and Canada; previous residency or fellowship; lack of research experience, volunteer exper
127 gery (GS) practice or postresidency surgical fellowship, leading to specialty surgical practice (SS).
130 A significant association was found between fellowship length and postresidency activity, with a 14.
133 h when the Match was operating, and with the fellowship markets for internal medicine subspecialties
137 complex trauma patients improved during the fellowship (mean 3.2 prior to fellowship versus 4.5 afte
142 rmacology and Therapeutics Clinical Research Fellowship, National Institute for Health Research, Astr
143 unded by a Marie Sklodowska-Curie Individual Fellowship (No 701464)" should have read "This project h
146 tter understanding of the impact of advanced fellowships on surgical resident training and education.
147 bout one third of the programs have only SCC fellowships, one third combine SCC/trauma in 1-yr progra
149 advice during the creation of a new teaching fellowship opportunity, fundraising efforts to support s
151 t common reasons given for not considering a fellowship or interpretation of mammograms were that bre
154 l training, hepatology now has an accredited fellowship pathway and is recognized as a distinct disci
155 (FCT), Harvard Medical School DuPont-Warren Fellowship, Portuguese national funds from FCT and Fundo
157 expert in organizational science to identify fellowship position requirements and associated competen
158 ses show an ongoing decline in the number of fellowship positions filled, and, more important, in the
162 and e-mail queries to critical care medicine fellowship program directors and members of national and
163 in the first year of our Pulmonary Medicine Fellowship Program from September 2012 to September 2013
165 likelihood of matching into an ophthalmology fellowship program included graduates from the US versus
166 ically Focused Research Network Cross-Center Fellowship program to enhance the competencies of early-
168 on are combined with data from residency and fellowship programs and accrediting bodies in an agent-b
170 c intensive care unit physicians that direct fellowship programs frequently perceived being overburde
172 Ultrasonography training was offered by fellowship programs in the following areas: vascular acc
173 has been available to cardiovascular disease fellowship programs in the United States since 2011.
174 ing positions among infectious diseases (ID) fellowship programs nationwide indicates that ID is decl
177 logy education researchers through education fellowship programs specific to radiology and mobilizing
178 ned in a core group of similar residency and fellowship programs that included Harvard, Columbia, Cor
181 iations in the requirements for IM-based CCM fellowship programs will facilitate effective CCM traini
182 in accredited US pulmonary and critical care fellowship programs with knowledge about mechanical vent
183 eased emphasis on personnel training through fellowship programs, and greater focus on preventive car
184 also in Europe, a growing number of special fellowship programs, sometimes called "superpostdocs," o
198 th and Medical Research Council Early Career Fellowship, Sanming Project of Medicine in Shenzhen, Nat
199 North West England Medical Research Council Fellowship Scheme in Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeut
200 North West England Medical Research Council Fellowship Scheme in Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeut
203 etirement and mortality rates, the number of fellowship slots and fill rates, and practice patterns o
204 luded questions regarding the content of the fellowship, specifically, subspecialty rotations, trauma
206 with age, academic residency, top residency, fellowship, state median wage, practice type, ethnicity,
207 en spend twice as much time in residency and fellowship than in undergraduate medical education, one
208 bstantially more inclusive brand of surgical fellowship than it did during the lifetime of Dr. Drew.
212 als funded by the British Infection Society (fellowship to T. Bicanic), the Wellcome Trust (research
213 biological molecules and obtained a Nuffield Fellowship to work in Bernal's department at Birkbeck Co
214 additional training in clinical or research fellowships to deepen their expertise in molecular imagi
215 ovide a forum for the directors of MI and GI fellowships to exchange ideas, formulate training curric
216 uch as quality improvement or time for "mini-fellowships" to allow graduates to develop a deeper set
217 important that residencies and subspecialty fellowships train a cadre of physicians to prepare patie
218 luated using RSNA guidelines by 9 readers (6 fellowship trained thoracic radiologists and 3 radiology
219 s image review by a research fellow and by a fellowship-trained abdominal radiologist for examination
222 nt performance approximating that of unaided fellowship-trained attending physicians.Supplemental mat
223 ed spectral mammography were analyzed by two fellowship-trained breast imagers with 2.5 years of expe
224 rmed between August 2013 and July 2017, four fellowship-trained breast imaging radiologists blinded t
226 d resident performance approximating unaided fellowship-trained expert performance in the multiclass
227 gical) and fellow (control) eyes by a masked fellowship-trained glaucoma specialist; evaluation inclu
233 cutaneous abscess drainage is performed by a fellowship-trained radiologist at 92 (97%) of 95 academi
234 e subset with two groups of human observers: fellowship-trained radiologists and orthopedists; senior
235 ed regression models, female radiologists or fellowship-trained radiologists had significantly higher
236 ercutaneous drainage is usually performed by fellowship-trained radiologists in abscesses of more tha
238 VSR graduates achieve comparable outcomes to fellowship-trained surgeons once in clinical practice.
242 with noninfectious uveitis were diagnosed by fellowship-trained uveitis specialists after exclusion o
243 rams achieve equivalent surgical outcomes as fellowship-trained vascular surgeons once in practice.
244 m an academic institution was annotated by 2 fellowship-trained, board-certified bariatric surgeons.
248 earch fellowship is associated with clinical fellowship training after residency, it is unclear to wh
249 ed training in the last 17 years, 60 pursued fellowship training and 55 went directly into general su
250 activity, with a 14.7% increase in clinical fellowship training and a 15.2% decrease in private prac
251 hip, research, and career development during fellowship training and improving the image of academic
253 ons, COCATS 4 will enrich the cardiovascular fellowship training experience for patients, programs, a
254 ive cardiologists who have already completed fellowship training given the opportunity to sit for an
259 tely for radiologists with and those without fellowship training in breast imaging, taking into accou
262 phthalmology PDs are predominantly male with fellowship training in glaucoma, cornea, or neuro-ophtha
263 nal activities and curricular milestones for fellowship training in pulmonary medicine, critical care
264 transformative advancement in cardiovascular fellowship training intended, ultimately, to improve pat
265 field; promulgated educational standards for fellowship training of PNSs; and established a unified m
266 blishment of the AUPO FCC, and the impact of fellowship training on the ophthalmology community.
271 sured by the h-index), practice setting, and fellowship training status and were obtained from state
272 ed funds (19% vs 3%, P < .001), residency or fellowship training support (37% vs 2%, P < .001), and c
273 Women radiologists were more likely to have fellowship training than men (69% vs 60%, P = .007), alt
274 ed fellowship trainees with 9 months of body fellowship training were asked to record the presence or
276 emergency surgery into "acute care surgery" fellowship training, a better understanding of current p
277 h at least one member having chest radiology fellowship training, and fewer than 5 years of experienc
278 rative logs, ABSITE scores, ABS performance, fellowship training, and subsequent career choices were
279 diologists differ from men in regard to age, fellowship training, full- versus part-time employment,
280 ost general surgery (GS) residents to pursue fellowship training, resulting in a shortage of surgeons
281 ago and responded to questions about gender, fellowship training, state of practice, and salary were
282 C was to develop guidelines for high-quality fellowship training, to provide a forum for the director
287 ved during the fellowship (mean 3.2 prior to fellowship versus 4.5 after first year versus 5.8 after
289 Additionally, several years ago, a second fellowship was created for radiology trainees, which is
290 nowledge they gained from the RSNA Editorial Fellowship was crucial for their academic and profession
292 share their experience of the RSNA Editorial Fellowship was sent to 19 previous RSNA Editorial Fellow
293 medium to high satisfaction with the overall fellowship, webinar content and facilitation, staff comm
295 rstand how early surgical specialization and fellowships will impact the future of general surgery ed
298 ted off-hours by radiologists in an academic fellowship within 10 hours of initial interpretation.
299 anic), the Wellcome Trust (research training fellowships WT069991, to A.E. Brouwer and WT081794, to J