Child Neurology Residency Program

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Learn more about Child Neurology at Children's.

Dear Candidate,

Ira Bergman, MD, PhD
Ira Bergman, MD, PhD
Chief of Service

Thank you for your interest in the Child Neurology Residency at Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC. We hope that you have the opportunity to visit and get to know our program. Let me take this opportunity to highlight key elements.

Tradition: The Division of Child Neurology was established at Children’s Hospital in 1972 and began training its first resident in 1974 under the leadership of Michael J. Painter, MD, and Patricia K. Crumrine, MD. Currently, Dr. Painter is chief of Outpatient Education and as such, he is responsible for the education and supervision of students, residents, fellows, nurse practitioners and physician assistants working in the outpatient department of the division. He is also director of the Neurodevelopmental Disabilities (NDD) residency program. Dr. Crumrine is director of EEG and Medical Epilepsy and also is director of the Residency Program. I joined the division in 1979 and Rajiv Varma, MD, director of Clinical Services, started his child neurology residency in the division in 1980. Miya Asato, MD, started her child neurology residency in the division in 1999 and will become director of the NDD residency in July 2008. We currently have 14 full time faculty, nine neurology or neurodevelopmental disability residents, four nurse practitioners, seven nurses and numerous support staff. The division has a long tradition of excellence maintained by exceptional continuity of leadership and staff. The traditional values of this program include total commitment to patient care, love of the intellectual community whether learning or teaching, scholarship, and respect for our patients, students, colleagues and each other. There is a strong family feel to the division, which is evident as we bump into each other in small groups around the hospital or when current and past members gather in large groups at neurology meetings.   

Patients: The greatest strength of the program is the large, diverse and sick patient population that it treats. Children’s is the only children’s hospital in the region, serving 3.5 million people and providing envelope-stretching care in every medical and surgical specialty. The intensive care units — Neonatal, Pediatric and Cardiac — are large and busy. The University of Pittsburgh is known internationally for its care in transplant, oncology and neurosurgery. As a child neurology resident you will care for every type of primary neurological disease and every neurological complication of systemic disease. I guarantee that when you graduate from this program, you will be comfortable addressing any patient who comes to your office and consulting on any patient, no matter how sick, in the hospital. You won’t always know the answer but you will know how to approach and think about the problem.

Faculty support: The program will support you. Unquestionably the greatest contributor to your education is yourself — your curiosity, interests, reading, researching, discussing, “googling” and thinking — but the faculty will always be present to help, guide and nurture. We will stand with you and take responsibility for the patients. We appreciate your skills, ambitions, hard work and care and hope to share our love of children, families, medicine and neurology with you. We are always available to discuss immediate problems, long-term goals and the wonders of child neurology.

Teaching program: The teaching and clinical program is structured and comprehensive. Residency will begin with one month of didactic sessions to prepare you for your role as a specialist, and then 11 months doing various rotations in adult neurology. The nervous system is more clearly defined in the mature organism, and this year of experience will teach you to recognize the modular elements of the nervous system as they function and malfunction in adult humans. The next two years will consist of six months of service leading the inpatient child neurology team, six months of outpatient and emergency room service, and 12 months of elective time. You will see the nervous system as it matures from fetal to adult life. Metamorphosis will unfold in front of your trained eyes.

Electives are available in most neurological subspecialties and are exceptionally strong: neuroradiology, EEG, EMG, epilepsy, muscle and peripheral nerve, movement disorders, stroke, neurosurgery, physical medicine and rehabilitation, psychiatry, neuro-ophthalmology, neuro-otology, neuropathology, neuro-oncology, sleep medicine, genetics, developmental medicine and others. The Child Neurology Division has specialized programs in epilepsy, tuberous sclerosis, neurofibromatosis, Tourette’s syndrome, white matter disease and neuromuscular disease. We are one of six national centers with a program in neurodevelopmental disabilities and have a specialized center for autism. There are scheduled educational sessions each day of the week and one day featuring the clinical conference in child neurology. This conference presents a current patient with a difficult problem to the entire faculty for analysis and is a superb teaching opportunity. The program is large, with many faculty members eager to teach and many residents with whom to share experiences and call.  

Research: UPMC is one of the great academic institutions in the United States. Almost every clinical program is outstanding and on the cutting edge of medical diagnosis and therapy. The library is supported by millions of dollars in federal grants each year and puts every journal, book, protocol and database on your computer for immediate access at no cost. The university houses an enormous amount and variety of top-tier basic and clinical research in every imaginable field and is generous in supporting young investigators. If you want to pursue research, you will find a scientifically exciting niche here and the university will support you. The university and our program will provide you with every opportunity to grow intellectually, scientifically and clinically. You will choose the direction but we will help with the means.

Location: Finally, let’s discuss the city. Pittsburgh has small-town virtues with some big-city advantages. If you have a family, this is a wonderful place to raise children. There are beautiful neighborhoods, lovely parks, excellent day care, good schools and special programs in music, art and sports for children. More subtly, family is the major value here and you will quickly find a community of young parents who want to share the experience with you. If you are single, the medical center, business and legal communities are vibrant and filled with bright, intellectual and ambitious young people like yourself. The city has major league sports teams and world-class theatre, art and music. The city is filled with people of every age jogging, biking, paddling and playing basketball, racquetball, squash, tennis, golf and every other sport.

One of our major missions and passions is education. We are thrilled to meet the next generation of child neurologists and hope to share experiences with you. If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact any of us by e-mail or by phone.

Sincerely,

Ira Bergman, MD, PhD
Chief, Division of Child Neurology
Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC
Professor of Pediatrics, Neurology and Immunology
University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine

3705 Fifth Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA, USA 15213-2583
Tel. 412-692-6182
Fax: 412-692-6787
E-mail: ira.bergman@chp.edu

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Updated 11/5/07