Your future starts now! Application deadline for the Dermatology Residency Program is Nov. 1, 2024.
505-272-3402The mission of the University of New Mexico Dermatology Residency Program is to produce outstanding clinicians, scientists, and leaders in the field of Dermatology. The Program achieves these objectives in a supportive, collegial environment. Here, residents learn to provide the highest level of dermatology care with expertise, compassion, and professionalism.
The overarching educational goal of the Program is to provide a wide range of clinical experiences, including general dermatology, pediatric dermatology, specialty clinics, dermatopathology, dermatologic surgery, and teledermatology to prepare the residents for lifelong excellence in the field. Residents participate in clinical rotations, case conferences, didactic lecture series, and other activities with a strong focus on mastery of the core competencies with progressively increasing levels of responsibility and decision making. The department gives special attention to professional development, personal growth and physician well-being.
In today’s complex healthcare environment, the Program emphasizes prevention, early detection of disease, evidence-based medicine, a collaborative environment in a multispecialty setting, ethics, cost-consciousness, and effective patient communication to establish strong doctor-patient relationships. We focus on helping new physician trainees acquire skillsets to promote wellness and balance and to develop resilience and adaptability in the face of increasing challenges in the practice of medicine.
The UNM Department of Dermatology is committed to supporting physician well-being for individuals and as it relates to the clinical learning environment. The UNM Dermatology Residency Program provides self-management skill support with the goal of promoting wellness and balance and providing residents with tools to thrive both personally and professionally.
Our top priority is to create a supportive environment of inquiry and academic pursuits with a culture of respect and accountability for physician well-being, which is crucial to the ability of those working in it to deliver the safest, best possible care to patients.
The faculty and staff of the UNM Department of Dermatology are fully committed to ensuring that trainees acquire the knowledge and skills of our discipline as well as professional and personal growth while adhering to the highest standards of quality and safety in the delivery of patient care services.
https://www.aamc.org/what-we-do/mission-areas/medical-research/resident-compact
The Compact Between Resident Physicians and Their Teachers is a declaration of the fundamental principles of graduate medical education (GME) and the major commitments of both residents and faculty to the educational process, to each other and to the patients they serve. The Compact's purpose is to provide institutional GME sponsors, program directors and residents with a model statement that will foster more open communication, clarify expectations and re-energize the commitment to the primary educational mission of training tomorrow's doctors.
Residency is an integral component of the formal education of physicians. In order to practice medicine independently, physicians must receive a medical degree and complete a supervised period of residency training in a specialty area. To meet their educational goals, resident physicians must participate actively in the care of patients and must assume progressively more responsibility for that care as they advance through their training. In supervising resident education, faculty must ensure that trainees acquire the knowledge and special skills of their respective disciplines while adhering to the highest standards of quality and safety in the delivery of patient care services. In addition, faculty are charged with nurturing those values and behaviors that strengthen the doctor-patient relationship and that sustain the profession of medicine as an ethical enterprise.
Institutional sponsors of residency programs and program faculty must be committed to maintaining high standards of educational quality. Resident physicians are first and foremost learners. Accordingly, a resident’s educational needs should be the primary determinant of any assigned patient care services. Residents must, however, remain mindful of their oath as physicians and recognize that their responsibilities to their patients always take priority over purely educational considerations.
Preparing future physicians to meet patients’ expectations for optimal care requires that they learn in clinical settings epitomizing the highest standards of medical practice. Indeed, the primary obligation of institutions and individuals providing resident education is the provision of high quality, safe patient care. By allowing resident physicians to participate in the care of their patients, faculty accept an obligation to ensure high quality medical care in all learning environments.
Fundamental to the ethic of medicine is respect for every individual. In keeping with their status as trainees, resident physicians are especially vulnerable and their well-being must be accorded the highest priority. Given the uncommon stresses inherent in fulfilling the demands of their training program, residents must be allowed sufficient opportunities to meet personal and family obligations, to pursue recreational activities, and to obtain adequate rest.
This compact serves both as a pledge and as a reminder to resident physicians and their teachers that their conduct in fulfilling their obligations to one another is the medium through which the profession perpetuates its standards and inculcates its ethical values.
Medical Education Program Specialist
Kathy Freise Department of Dermatology 1 University of New Mexico MSC07 4240 Albuquerque, NM 87131-0001 505-272-6000 |
1001 Medical Arts Ave. Albuquerque, NM 87131 |