Departments and Specialties

Obstetrics & Gynecology Residency Program

About the Department

Ob Gyn Residency Program at Monmouth Medical CenterEach year, the department handles 4,200 births, 6,000 admissions and 11,100 outpatient visits. In addition, there are 1,800 gynecological surgical admissions. The department has 12 labor rooms, total electronic monitoring, three well-equipped delivery/operating rooms, and 38 private postpartum beds.

Monmouth is a state-designated regional perinatal center, where high-risk patients with maternal and neonatal complications are received and treated. The center serves as an educational and consulting resource to hospitals and obstetricians throughout central and southern New Jersey. Residents work alongside the sub-specialists in maternal-fetal medicine and neonatology who staff the center. Patients are seen in an outpatient setting comparable to a private office.

About the Program

Residents in Monmouth Medical Center's obstetrics and gynecology program learn more than just the medical skills needed to become a physician in this specialized field. They develop an equally important skill---how to treat patients as people, offering them and their families the support they need at what could be the most joyful, or most difficult, time of their lives. After completing the four-year residency---a total of 24 months devoted to clinical obstetrics and another 24 months to clinical gynecology---residents are prepared either to enter private practice or to enter a fellowship.

About the Faculty

A highly regarded teaching faculty brings a wealth of experience to the residency program in academics, clinical knowledge and patient care. Certified sub-specialists in maternal fetal medicine, reproductive endocrinology and gynecologic oncology are part of the faculty, which takes an active role in helping residents plan their future-whether it's starting private practice or entering a postgraduate fellowship.

What to Expect

Residents combine a full academic schedule with clinical experience. They are assigned to both inpatient and outpatient services, assuring treatment of all types of patients—from those in the emergency department and delivery room to those involved in Planned Parenthood or seeking private practice care.

Residents gain experience working collaboratively with nurse-midwives. In addition, residents develop close working relationships with other departments, particularly pediatrics in the care of newborns. Residents have training in fields that complement the study of obstetrics and gynecology, including anesthesiology, pathology, oncology, radiation therapy, medicine, psychiatry, breast diseases, emergency medicine, and geriatrics.

Because surgical experience is an important part of the program, residents receive intensive operative endoscopic instruction, along with one-on-one operating room teaching and close supervision.

In the first year, the education is broadly based, and includes a one-month rotation in the emergency department and four months of ambulatory primary care, a one-month rotation in geriatrics.

While obstetrics is the primary focus of the first year, training in obstetrics and gynecology and primary care is fully integrated for the next three years. Oncology is included in the third and fourth years.

In clinical obstetrics, residents are involved in an integrated program of perinatal care, including identifying and assessing high-risk mothers, intrapartum care and postpartum family planning.

There is instruction in obstetric techniques and maneuvers, as well as in advanced methodology of fetal monitoring, pH scalp sampling, genetics, ante-partum testing and ultrasonography.

In clinical gynecology, residents care for both outpatients and inpatients with a full range of gynecological problems, and also participate in family planning clinics.

Since residents develop skills at different rates, the program is structured around the individual to assure that competency is gained in all phases of gynecological and obstetrical practice.

Academically, activities include working and teaching rounds, and grand rounds.

Weekly staff seminars provide the forum for updates on what's happening in the field. There are case presentations, discussions in such topics as perinatal mortality and talks by a host of visiting professors. Presentations also involve ethics, health law and business of medicine.

Residents also are involved in departmental research projects and are encouraged to develop their own research interests, under the guidance of Monmouth’s full-time epidemiologist research director.

Click to visit Obstetrics & Gynecology Residency site

To contact the Department telephone 800.807.9191 or e-mail:  mmcobgyn@sbhcs.com

Chairman & Program Director:
David M. Wallace, M.D.

Associate Program Director:
Raksha Joshi, FACOG, MRCOG, MD

 

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