GENERAL SURGERY RESIDENCY
The General Surgery Residency Program at Carolinas Medical Center is
a five-year surgical training program, fully-accredited by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical
Education. Our emphasis on education differentiates our medical center from other similar-sized,
non-university hospitals. We have assembled a dedicated faculty, 26 full-time and 13 clinical faculty, with
surgical expertise in all the principal components of general surgery. The goal of our residency program is
to prepare general surgeons to enter academic or clinical practice. Added qualification through additional
fellowship training is encouraged.
Three categorical positions are available each year at the PGY-1 level.
In addition, two preliminary positions are offered for physicians planning to enter training in specialties other than general surgery,
such as orthopedic surgery, urology or ENT.
Our program has five surgical services, which include three General Surgery services, a Pediatric Surgery service and a
Trauma Surgery service. Each General Surgery service has a PGY-5 resident as chief with a faculty member
attending each month. The Trauma Surgery service has a PGY-4 resident as chief and is attended by a faculty
member with expertise in trauma and surgical critical care. Trauma Surgery attending physicians are in-house
24-hours a day, and General Surgery faculty are readily available on call.
Training in both basic and advanced laparoscopic procedures
is an integral part of the General Surgery Residency Program. Surgical endoscopy is emphasized throughout the
entire residency training with ample experience at each level of training, including flexible sigmoidoscopy,
EGD, colonoscopy and therapeutic endoscopy.
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Carolinas Medical Center
Carolinas Medical Center is a 861-bed tertiary care medical center and Level I trauma center, the nucleus of an
integrated medical care network that supports a population of more than one million persons. In addition, this
hospital is the hub of an extensive regional primary care physician network called Carolinas Physicians Network
This balance provides a large volume and variety of surgical experience
ranging from simple to the most complex surgical problems.
Carolinas Medical Center supports a number of specialty clinical centers including The Women's
Institute, The Carolinas Heart Institute, the Blumenthal Cancer Center and The Transplant Center.
The Blumenthal Cancer Center, founded in 1989 and named a Teaching Hospital Cancer Program by the
American College of Surgeons Commission on Cancer, brings together teams of specialized care givers
in a spacious 20,000-square-foot facility opened in 1995. General Surgery faculty physicians direct
the Melanoma Care Program, the Immunotherapy Program, the GI Tumor Program, and the Breast Health
Center at Blumenthal Cancer Center and are an integral part of many other cancer center programs.
These programs provide oncology experience for residents in the General Surgery program. The
Transplant Center includes renal transplant, liver transplant, and kidney/pancreas transplant
programs. These programs are also directed by members of the General Surgery faculty and provide
extensive transplant experience for surgery residents.
The James G. Cannon Research Center, located on the Carolinas Medical Center campus, is a
58,000-square-foot research facility, unique for non-university hospitals. Dedicated in 1992, it
houses basic science research laboratories and an accredited vivarium. Clinical and bench research
are a part of our educational process. One resident from each in-coming class is selected to spend
an additional year in the laboratory as a research fellow. This research year generally follows the
PGY-2 year.
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