College of Medicine Announces New Emergency Medicine Residency

Jun 06, 2016 at 12:30 pm by Staff


The University of Central Florida College of Medicine has a new Emergency Medicine residency program that will begin in July 2016 and is seeking immediate applicants. The medical school's newest graduate medical education (GME) training program is in partnership with Osceola Regional Medical Center and is designed to bring more trained doctors to the Central Florida community.

UCF is beginning its resident recruitment process immediately for Emergency Medicine residents and plans to start several residents this summer, building to a full complement of 21 trainees in its three-year program.

Residency interviews will be offered competitively to all qualified medical school graduates, thus adding additional opportunities for UCF medical school graduates who wish to do their residency training in Orlando as well as other students from medical schools across Florida, the nation and the world. Residency training slots have become increasingly competitive as the U.S. builds more medical schools.

UCF received word that the national Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) had approved its residency program. The medical school's first residency program in Internal Medicine is conducted through a partnership with Osceola Regional Medical Center and the Orlando VA Medical Center and will be training 54 residents by July 2016

Emergency Medicine residents will benefit from the medical school's nationally recognized use of interactive, digital learning tools. "We are excited to have residents with a pioneering spirit who are excited about the chance to build something new and use cutting edge technology," said Dr. Bethany Ballinger, program director of the new Emergency Medicine residency who helped create the digital curriculum at the medical school.

The nation's most sought-after residencies expose residents to a rich array of patients presenting a multitude of conditions, thus giving young physicians greater opportunity to learn and practice. Osceola Regional's Emergency Department has over 80,000 patient visits a year and will offer trainees the opportunity to treat both pediatric and adult emergency cases in Osceola County, one of Florida's most diverse and fastest-growing counties. In addition to the significant commitment it has shown to GME programs, the medical center is a designated stroke and chest pain center, and has provisional designation as a Level 2 Trauma Center.

Increasing residency programs has been a big priority for hospitals and medical schools throughout Florida, where residency programs have not kept pace with population and medical school growth:

For more information about the College of Medicine's Emergency Medicine residency program, please visit gme.med.ucf.edu.

Sections: Clinical