WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY IN ST. LOUIS SCHOOL OF MEDICINE PEDIATRICS INFECTIOUS DISEASES TEACHING
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Infectious Diseases | Teaching

Elective Rotation for Students and Residents

Objectives

The general objective of the 4 week rotation in pediatric infectious diseases is to provide 4th year medical students and PL-2/PL-3 residents with the opportunity to care for children with a broad variety of infectious diseases, allowing development of evaluative and therapeutic knowledge and skills in this area of pediatrics.

Specific goals include the following:

  1. To learn to recognize and treat complications of common infections in children

  2. To learn to recognize and treat opportunistic infections in immunocompromised children

  3. To learn to recognize and treat unusual infections in immunocompetent children

  4. To learn to select antimicrobials for specific infectious diseases

  5. To learn about the overall management of children with HIV exposure and infection

  6. To learn preventive steps to avoid infectious illnesses

  7. To gain an appreciation for infection control and public health issues and to be aware of how to communicate with public health authorities

  8. To gain an understanding of strengths and limitations of the diagnostic tests performed in the clinical microbiology laboratories


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Responsibilities

  1. Participate in the daily activities of the pediatric infectious diseases team, including inpatient rounds and microbiology laboratory rounds with the attending, fellow, and medical student

  2. Perform consultations on inpatients and emergency outpatients as assigned by the fellow or attending

  3. Write notes on inpatients on a daily basis or as advised by the fellow or attending

  4. See patients in the pediatric HIV clinic Monday afternoons

  5. See patients in the general pediatric infectious diseases clinic Thursday mornings

  6. Dictate letters to primary care physicians and other appropriate individuals (i.e. medical and surgical subspecialists who may be involved in follow-up care) on all inpatients and outpatients, unless otherwise advised by the fellow or attending

  7. Dictate discharge summaries on patients admitted to the infectious disease service

  8. Attend the Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases research conference Monday mornings from 8:15 a.m. - 9 a.m.

  9. Attend the Adult-Pediatric Infectious Diseases case conference Tuesday mornings from 8 a.m. - 9 a.m. and present at least one case during the rotation.

  10. Attend the Pediatric Infectious Diseases case conference Wednesdays from 12 p.m - 1 p.m. and present cases as assigned by the fellow and attending

Case Conference Presentations

Date Title
6/15/2004 3 year old with eosinophilia
5/18/2004 Congenital CMV
4/6/2004 Gonococcal meningitis
3/30/2004 Paratyphoid Fever
3/24/2004 Staphylococcus aureus endocarditis & NEC
3/16/2004 Neonatal HSV-SEM
3/10/2004 Kawasaki Disease with a retropharnyngeal phlegmon and EM rash
3/9/2004 Herpes Zoster and preseptal cellulitis
2/10/2004 GAS subdural empyema & meningocerebritis
1/26/2004 Antiparasitic treatment and neurocystercercosis
1/20/2004 Pseudomonas hot foot
1/7/2004 Mandibular osteomyelitis
12/23/2003 Bartonella vertebral osteomyelitis
12/16/2003 S.pneumoniae meningitis with purpura
12/9/2003 Neurofibromatosis mimickingcervical and retropharyngeal swelling
11/18/2003 HIV, Bartonella, and GC
10/28/2003 Loxocelism
10/14/2003 Streptococcus mitis infective endocarditis
10/7/2003 Bactrim-related encephalopathy
9/1/2003 ALL presenting as neck swelling
8/26/2003 Bartonella encephalitis
8/24/2003 Erythemia multiforme major
8/19/2003 MRSA tibial osteomyelitis
8/18/2003 Finger osteomyelitis
8/11/2003 ALL presenting with neutropenic enterocolitis
6/17/2003 Human African Trypanosomiasis

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