Overview:
The
Occupational Medicine Residency Program focuses both
on the use of critical thinking and research approaches
in investigations. Residents are trained to recognize,
manage and prevent occupational disease and injury. Research
focuses on:
- Prevention of occupational asthma,
- Newly emerging occupational infectious diseases from blood borne pathogens,
- Repetitive motion injuries of the upper extremity and back (emphasizing ergonomic control and prevention),
- Indoor air quality control, and
- The changing economy and workplace, and its influence on worker safety and health.
The practicum includes at
least four months of supervised real world of work
training and includes rotations in utility and power
industry, aeronautic and space industry, occupational
medicine clinics and regulatory agencies. Rotation site locations are described below.
Research time is required. We
are proud of our faculty's educational and research
accomplishments and we encourage faculty members and
residents to work closely together in a supportive
environment to refine professional skills in conducting
research studies. It is our goal to provide you
with an outstanding education that will lead to the
greatest development of your skills in preparation
of a lifetime of personal and professional gratification
and to successful certification by the American Board
of Preventive Medicine/Occupational Medicine. The
residency is accredited by the
Accreditation
Council for Graduate Medical Education.
Educational Faculty:
This
OMR program has four faculty members on staff:
Stuart
M. Brooks, MD, Director
Tom
Truncale, DO, MPH, Assistant Professor, Division of Pulmonary,
Critical Care and
Occupational
Medicine Mission:
The
mission of the residency program is to prepare physicians
for careers in Occupational Medicine in the 21st century. The
residency furnishes a broad base of knowledge which
includes all aspects of occupational safety and health
with an emphasis on protective and preventive policies,
procedures, practices and programs. Graduates
are trained to administer, manage and direct clinical
occupational health programs. The residency clinical
rotations emphasize health of workers and their ability
to perform work; the arrangement of work; and the physical,
chemical and social environment in the workplace. There
enough flexibility in the program to allow each resident
to pursue and achieve individual interests and career
goals.
Residency Program Options:
Applicants
are strongly encouraged to apply to the two-year concurrent
academic and practicum phase residency program. The
academic work is completed at the
College of Public Health
during the evenings, while
the practicum activities take place in the community
during the day. A one year practicum is available
for suitable candidates who already have an MPH degree.
Financial Support:
Stipend support and tuition
waivers may be provided for residents accepted into
the residency.
Admission
Requirements
Acceptance into the residency
requires graduation from an approved medical school
and completion of at least two years of clinical training
in an accredited primary care residency in the
United States
Consideration will
be given for resident applicants having considerable
occupational medicine practice experience and a minimum
of one year of clinical specialty training. In
addition, candidates must have passed all three steps
of the USMLE or have possession of a valid state medical
license. The Residency Program generally accepts
between two to four residents per year.
| Public Health Core Courses (15 credits) |
Credits |
| PHC 6000 |
Epidemiology |
3 |
| PHC 6050 |
Biostatistics |
3 |
| PHC 6357 |
Environmental and Occupational Health |
3 |
| PHC 6102 |
Principles of Health Policy and Management |
3 |
| PHC 6410 |
Social and Behavioral Sciences Applied to Health |
3 |
| Occupational Health Core Courses (15 credits) |
|
| PHC 6356 |
Industrial Hygiene |
2 |
| PHC 6310 |
Environmental Occupational Toxicology |
3 |
| PHC 6423 |
Occupational Health Law |
2 |
| PHC 6360 |
Safety Management Principles and Practices |
2 |
| PHC 6351 |
Occupational Medicine for Health Professionals |
3 |
| PHC 6361 |
Industrial Ergonomics |
2 |
| PHC 6354 |
Safety and Health Administration |
2 |
| |
Electives |
6 |
| |
Thesis |
6 |
Applications and Forms to Apply to the
Residency:
If
you would like to apply to the occupational Medicine
Residency, please download the following documents,
complete them and then e-mail:
traj@health.usf.edu or mail them to:
Tabitha Raj
Residency Coordinator
USF College of Public Health
Occupational Medicine Residency Program
13201 Bruce B. Downs Blvd. - Rm. MHH 320 Mailbox #: MDC 56 Tampa, Florida 33612-3805
Phone: 813-974-7537 / Fax: 813-974-4994
Rotation site locations:
Bay
Pines
Veterans
Administration
Hospital
The Bay Pines Veterans Medical
Center in
St. Petersburg
, is a 966 bed hospital with
a very active outpatient load. The occupational/environmental
health clinic patients include hospital employees
(3000) and volunteers (1000). There are also veterans
who reportedly were exposed to the environmental
hazards during service (e.g. Agent Orange, ionizing
radiation, Persian Gulf War, mustard gas, etc.)
There are approximately 20 patients seen each day
with a variety of problems, including acute musculoskeletal
injuries.
Various examinations are performed at the clinics
including: pre-employment and periodic examinations,
surveillance monitoring (ethylene oxide, asbestos,
solvents, nurse oncologists, laser operators, respiratory
protection, pesticide workers, and noise). Residents
provide primary occupational health care to employees
and become involved in preventive programs. For example,
the Bay Pines VA operates an extended care facility
where employees suffering from musculoskeletal and
back injuries can go. Residents assist in developing
preventive programs. The residents also evaluate and
treat special veterans exposed during the Gulf War
or to Agent Orange. Special employee programs include
evaluations for noise, ionizing radiation, asbestos,
chemicals and tuberculosis.
The Bay Pines VA rotations consist of a two month
sequence of core rotations which considers the
Bay
Pines
Medical
Center
as a physical plant facility
and a real-world-of-work experience. The emphasis
is on the work environment, the health and safety of
employees and the activities devoted to preventive
medicine. The experience helps to prepare the resident
for a career in the comprehensive practice of occupational
medicine. For the Bay Pines rotation, the resident
undertakes activities representing a supervised practice
of occupational medicine within an organized comprehensive
program of industrial employee health services. The
experience affords the resident the opportunity to
deal with clinical, scientific, social, legal and administrative
issues form the perspective of workers and their representatives,
employers, and regulatory or legal authorities. The
rotation also provides the resident the opportunity
for interacting with occupational health personnel,
employees, human resources and industrial relations
personnel, line supervisors, employee representatives
and the medical professionals. An element of particular
importance is the emphasis of collaborative work with
industrial hygienists, nurses, and safety personnel,
as well as with counselors or other professionals concerned
with psychosocial issues.
The rotations through various programs at the Bay
Pines VA will afford the resident sufficient continuity of
service to foster the assumption of authentic clinical and
administrative responsibilities and the development of mature
judgment and resourcefulness. The experiences at the Bay
Pines VA are designed to strengthen the resident's clinical
abilities and knowledge in general preventive medicine. The
preventive medicine experiences fuse together medical and
life-style practices that improve an individual's health
through: promoting health-enhancing environments and behaviors;
preventing disease and injury; making possible early diagnosis
and treatment; and fostering habilitation and rehabilitation
of persons with disabilities. The practicum rotations at
the Bay Pines VA strengthens the resident's clinical
and administrative abilities required for direct employee
care; employee job assignment; medical screening and surveillance
of employees and populations; health conservation and promotion;
environmental assessment for hazards; employee assistance
for help from drugs and alcohol abuse, emotional stress and
adverse life styles; and application of relevant regulatory
compliance.
Tampa Electric Company
Tampa Electric Company(TECO) is an electrical
industry which employs about 2400 workers and provides
electrical power for the greater
Tampa
area. Tampa Electric Company (TECO) is part of >TECO Energy, Inc., an
electric utility holding company with important diversified
activities. Its businesses engage in water transportation,
coal mining, natural gas production from coal seams,
independent power generation, conventional gas and
oil exploration and production, energy services, and
marketing of an advanced energy management and communications
system.
The resident spends at least one month at TECO which
is one of the real-world-of-work rotations. The emphasis
of TECO rotations are
- Occupational health administration,
- Employee assistance program,
- Wellness and health promotion,
- Pre-employment and pre-job assignment screening and surveillance,
- Environmental health, industrial hygiene and safety management,
- Disability/illness/absenteeism, and
- Issues indigenous to electrical utility industry.
TECO maintains a training facility
where there are simulations of various job tasks that
the workers conduct during their daily activities.
The resident has the opportunity of spending time in
the training facility. There is an active safety management
program directed by Mr. Lou Rinaldi, a member of the
Residency Advisory Committee. TECO has a very well
organized human resource program that deals with administrative
issues such as workers' compensation claims and benefits.
The acute injuries are seen either at
Tampa General
Hospital
or Comprehensive Occupational
Medicine for Business and Industry. Residents have
the opportunity of following TECO employees while rotating
through these rotations. The TECO rotation emphasizes
important issues including heat stress, ergonomic problems,
administrative issues and safety management. There
is also an industrial hygienist and nurses on staff.
The TECO rotation allows the resident to gain experience
in a comprehensive program, which employs industrial
employee health services and industrial hygiene practices.
The resident gains experience and expands his/her knowledge
of: the clinical efforts essential for the prevention,
diagnosis, treatment and rehabilitation of work-related
disorders; the development of a proficiency in monitoring
employee absences and examining ways in which the medical
staff can work closely with the Safety Managers and
Industrial Hygienists to ensure a safe and healthy
work environment.
James A. Haley Veterans
Administration Hospital
 |
The
James
A.
Haley
Veterans
Hospital
(JHV
H) is a tertiary care teaching hospital which operates 361hospital beds,
composed of 118 medical beds, 8 in neurology, 60 in
psychiatry, 42 in rehabilitation medicine, 60 in spinal
cord injury and 73 in surgery. There is also
an Extended Geriatric Care facility composed of a 180
bed Nursing Home Outpatient Clinic and the Bartow Community
Based Outpatient Clinic (CBOC). Complete ranges of
primary and subspecialty outpatient programs are also
provided.
An active role in the sharing of medical and other
scarce resources has been pursued with military installations
in
Tampa
(MacDill Air Force Base)
and with
Orlando
Naval
Hospital
.
Tampa
is also designated as a
Primary Reception Site for the National Disaster Medical
System and the VA/DOD Contingency Plan.
Tampa
is a major referral center
for DOD/ASMRO patients for rehabilitation, Spinal Cord
Injury, Psychiatry and other Clinical Care Programs.
Research activities have attracted national attention
in Immunology (asthma center); and in AIDS management.
The hospital was activated in 1972 and is affiliated
with the University of South Florida College of Medicine,
resulting in a unique and close professional relationship.
The JHVH rotations are intended to overlap and strengthen
many aspects of the real-world-of-work experiences.
The resident will have the opportunity to analyze and
apply their unique occupational health skills in the
day to day operational problem solving situations and
corresponding decision making opportunities as it relates
to them as "subject area consultants".
Kennedy Space Center
 |
The Kennedy Space Center (KSC) provides the resident
with the opportunity to become familiar with the aerospace
medicine. The rotation is unique because it offers
clinical rotations in specialty fields, which are located
at the launch site of past and future manned missions
to space. The program takes place at the
Kennedy
Space
Center
, located on
Florida's Space coast. It is the
only launch complex for manned space operations in
the
USA . There is an occupational
medicine facility for the 1300 KSC employees.
The rotation at KSC provides residents with an opportunity
to examine occupational health and safety issues from
the prospective of the aerospace industry. The education
and training of the resident involves supervision by
professionals who are Board Certified in several specialties,
including: occupational medicine, aerospace medicine,
internal medicine and emergency medicine. The resident
training at KSC emphasizes:
- Clinical care of workers in the prevention, diagnosis, treatment and rehabilitation
of work-related disorders;
- Evaluation of the fitness of workers for normal or modified job assignments
in a wide variety of work environments;
- Assessment of impairment and/or disability;
- Counseling and education of employees and supervisors regarding job-site
hazards, environmental hazards, and personal lifestyle
health-related habits;
- Planning, administration, supervision and health and safety risk assessment,
accident evaluations, and development of risk reduction
recommendations;
- Application of administrative and scientific principles in the achievement
of compliance with regulatory requirements and those of
workers' compensation plans; and
- Acquisition, compilation and evaluation of health and environmental data.
The one month rotation at KSC is considered a real-world-of-work
experience. The emphasis is on the work environment,
the health and safety of employees and the activities
are devoted to preventive medicine. Physicians at KSC
provide occupational health support for the employees,
including astronauts. Resident activities include clinical,
administrative, exposure assessment, surveillance,
ergonomics, physical agents, clinical toxicology, environmental
medicine and preventive approaches and wellness. The
resident deals with hazard evaluation and toxicity
of hazardous chemicals including rocket fuels and other
agents used in the aerospace program. Residents may
be present during some of the astronaut launches at
KSC.
Occupational Safety and Health Administration
The
Tampa
regional OSHA office is
one of the largest OSHA offices in the country, servicing
Tampa
and the surrounding regions.
It is one of the busiest offices in the country and
makes more than 1200 inspections each year. The resident
has the opportunity of viewing how OSHA will be working
with business and labor to rewrite many old, industry
consensus standards into plain language so they are
more understandable and useable. The resident may assist
in the process. OSHA's new philosophy is to rely on
a voluntary approach to correct workplace hazards through
cooperative actions. Examples are:
- Partnerships with workers and management to identify actions to reduce
or remove a hazard,
- Encouragement of voluntary standard-setting organizations (such as the
American National Standards Institute, and the American
Council of Governmental Industrial Hygienist) to take action
on priority hazards,
- The issuance of guidelines,
- The use of the existing Federal/State consultation program to encourage
employers to identify and correct priority hazards, and
- The dissemination of information about hazards and ways of preventing
or controlling them.
Information approaches involve the gathering, generation
and distribution of additional information about priority
hazards and issues. Examples include:
- Research on health effects or control technology,
- Technical information exchanges such as workshops or symposia,
- NIOSH Criteria Documents,
- Special Hazard Reviews and Hazard Alerts
- OSHA's "SafeWorks" and "Fatal Facts" Fact Sheets,
and
- Joint actions by employers and workers to publicize hazard information.
Heritage Summit Healthcare of Florida, Inc.
The rotation at Heritage
Summit
Healthcare of Florida, Inc.,
provides training in occupational medicine practice
with an emphasis on
- Clinical care of workers in the prevention, diagnosis, treatment and rehabilitation
of work-related disorders,
- Evaluation of fitness of workers for normal or modified job assignments
in a wide variety of work environments, and the assessment
of impairment and disability,
- Counseling and education of workers and supervisors with respect to work
or environmental hazards, health-related habits of living,
and the arrangements of work,
- The planning, administration, supervision, and evaluation of a broad program
for the protection and promotion of the health and safety
of workers in the work setting including health risks assessment,
accident evaluation, and risk reduction,
- Application of administrative and scientific principles in the achievement
of compliance with regulatory requirements and those of
workers' compensation plans, and
- Acquisition, collation, storage and analysis of health and environmental
data.
Tampa General
Hospital
(TGH)
TGH is affiliated with the University of South Florida
College of Medicine and serves as the primary teaching
hospital for the University. The large numbers
of physicians in almost all departments are also USF
faculty, therefore, arrangements can and have been
made to develop a variety of educational experiences
for the residents. TGH is a 1,000 bed international
and regional referral center.
Residents spend at least three months over the two
year residency at TGH. The practicum rotations
consist of clinical occupational medicine and subspecialty
clinics in areas related to occupational medicine. Residents
select the particular rotation from those which have
been developed at this site to date, dependent on their
own personal background interests and career goals. There
are also ancillary clinically related experiences offered
as electives in the areas such as poison control, physical
rehabilitation, etc. Other Rotation Sites:
Other rotation sites are added to
the occupational medicine residency as necessary. Information
about the newest addition of rotation sites will be available
on this website soon. These sites include:
- Lakeside Occupational Medical Centers, PA,
- US Healthworks and
- The
University
of South Florida, Consultation Program
Tabitha Raj
Residency Coordinator
USF College of Public Health
Occupational Medicine Residency Program
13201 Bruce B. Downs Blvd. - Rm. MHH 320 Mailbox #: MDC 56 Tampa, Florida 33612-3805
Phone: 813-974-7537 / Fax: 813-974-4994