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We intentionally have no fellowships in Minimally Invasive Surgery, Surgical Oncology, Colorectal Surgery, or Acute Care Surgery in order to give our residents the most robust clinical and operative experience possible. Senior residents are performing and managing complex hepatobiliary, colorectal, and advanced GI cases. Junior trainees gain early proficiency in basic and advanced laparoscopy while developing a strong foundation in trauma and critical care. Our services are resident run where chief residents serve as junior faculty members and independent thought and autonomy are emphasized. Didactics, surgical simulation, journal club, quality improvement, professional development, conference travel and informal activities are also integrated into training. Additionally, our residents are exposed to training in a variety of clinical settings with rotations at a Level 1 trauma center, quaternary referral university hospital, Veterans Affairs hospital, Cincinnati Children’s, two private community-based hospitals (Westchester Hospital and The Christ Hospital), and a global surgery rotation at Mzuzu Hospital in Malawi, Africa.
Most residents complete two years of dedicated professional development and research training (PGY-3 and PGY-4). Supported by NIH-funded faculty, T32 training grants, and robust infrastructure with PhDs and biostatisticians, residents pursue projects in translational/basic science, health services, clinical outcomes, and surgical education. Residents with extensive research experience or with military obligations may have these years waived. Our Cincinnati Research for Outcomes and Safety in Surgery (CROSS) and Cincinnati Research for Education and Surgical Training (CREST) groups additionally provide residents with opportunities to develop the skills necessary to become impactful health services and clinical outcomes researchers. Since 2015, our residents have produced more than 500 manuscripts (averaging over 60 manuscripts per academic year) with accepted podium presentations at major academic conferences including American College of Surgeons, SAGES, EAST, Society of Surgical Oncology, American Surgical Association, Central Surgical Association, Southern Surgical Association, SSAT, APDS, AHPBA, American Transplant Congress, and more.
A mid-sized, accessible city with all the attributes of a large city without the high cost of living. A strong resident camaraderie and culture with a history of producing surgical leaders in academia, community practice, and hospital administration, our program emphasizes independence, operative autonomy, and academic productivity. Our fellowship match is one of our strongest attributes, with residents routinely matching into the most competitive fellowships across the country within Pediatric Surgery, Surgical Oncology, Colorectal Surgery, Minimally Invasive Surgery, Vascular Surgery, Cardiothoracic Surgery, Transplant Surgery, and Trauma Critical Care. For those not interested in pursuing a fellowship or academia, our chief residents become competent, confident surgeons ready to go into private practice upon graduation.
Jeffrey J. Sussman, MD General Surgery Residency Director
Jenna M. Smith, MHAGeneral Surgery Residency CoordinatorPhone: 513-558-4206Email: lengerja@ucmail.uc.edu
Beth HumenskyGeneral Surgery Residency Assistant CoordinatorPhone: 513-558-5862Email: limkeer@ucmail.uc.edu
University of CincinnatiCollege of Medicine231 Albert Sabin WayCincinnati, OH 45267-0558
Mail Location: 0558Education: 513-558-4206