Surgical Critical Care Fellowship

The Surgical Critical Care Fellowship Program at UT Southwestern

Discover why UT Southwestern is the ideal place to complete your critical care training. Hear from the fellowship program director and leaders in the Division of Burn, Trauma, Acute and Critical Care Surgery.

The purpose of the Surgical Critical Care fellowship is:

  • To provide extended post-surgical training in trauma surgery and surgical critical care
  • To satisfy the American Board of Surgery requirements for obtaining certification of Added Qualifications in Surgical Critical Care

Overview

The large majority of the fellow's clinical responsibilities will be in the surgical intensive care unit at Parkland Memorial Hospital and William P. Clements Jr. University Hospital. The fellow will be directly supervised by faculty in all of the surgical intensive care units.

The critical care fellowship emphasizes clinical care. Upon completion of the fellowship, the fellow should have succinct knowledge of cardiovascular and pulmonary physiology and pathophysiology, ventilatory care, as well as cardiovascular monitoring and interpretation. The fellow will be competent in the management of multisystem trauma patients, recognition and treatment of major postoperative problems in surgical patients, and an appreciation of the critical care management of specialty patients including neurosurgical and cardiothoracic. A distinct effort has been made to increase the operative experience to the most permissible under ACGME requirements. Finally, fellows will receive certification in the Advanced Trauma Operative Management (ATOM) course.

Research Activity

Research activities are encouraged but not required, and facilitated with a weekly research conference. Fellows will be sent to one national meeting per year of training.

Didactics

We use the Scientific American SCC curriculum, and lectures are given by the faculty each week.

Facilities