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ϰϲͼ Ophthalmology Residency Training Program

The ϰϲͼ residency training program in Ophthalmology is designed to prepare resident physicians to achieve sufficient professional ability to practice competently and independently in the diagnosis and management of medical and surgical diseases of the eye. Full-time faculty with a wide range of subspecialty interests and a commitment to teaching, a diverse patient population and excellent clinical and research facilities all contribute to the fulfillment of this objective.
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Ophthalmology Residency News Article 102521

ϰϲͼ Named in the Top Ten A+ Academic Ophthalmology Institutions

We’re proud to share our ophthalmology residency program has been ranked an A+ institution by Ophthalmology Business Minute. From the subspecialties we offer, to the hands-on experience, our goal is to provide the best training and experience for our residents.

Ophthalmology Residency Training Program 

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Statement of Goals
The goal of this program is to train resident physicians in developing the proper clinical judgment and surgical skills to care for patients with a wide variety of medical and surgical diseases of the eye. The training will allow resident physicians to develop sound academic principles, utilizing a learning environment with graded autonomy. Upon completing the residency, physicians are required to obtain competence in the six general competencies to the level expected of a new practitioner.
Outline of Training Program
All of our residents have the same rotations and therefore equivalent educational opportunities across our three training facilities, Froedtert & the ϰϲͼ Eye Institute, Children's Wisconsin and the Clement J. Zablocki VA Medical Center. Each of the three institutions has excellent, well-equipped physical facilities for the examination of eye patients. Annual outpatient clinic volume and surgical volume for the three teaching institutions total approximately 70,000 outpatient visits and 4000 major surgical procedures.

The three institutions have different educational emphases: the Eye Institute being the site at which the residents participate in faculty clinics and surgery to provide broad exposure to all aspects of ophthalmology in a tertiary-care setting; Children's Wisconsin being the site at which residents gain experience examining children and familiarity with pediatric ophthalmic diseases and surgery; and the Zablocki VA being the site at which residents have the most primary patient-care responsibility.
Didactic and Teaching Conferences
Residents receive a structured didactic lecture series through the course of their residency training, providing instruction in the basic and clinical sciences pertaining to ophthalmology. The didactic lectures are based on a 18 month cycle, such that all residents receive each lecture twice during their training. Teaching and case presentation conferences (including Grand Rounds, Rotating Clinical Conferences, Morbidity and Mortality Conference, Fluorescein Angiography Conference and Cataract Conference) allows residents to establish a broad knowledge base in ophthalmology.
Surgical and Procedural Experience
Ophthalmology is a discipline in which surgeries and procedures are an important part of the specialty. Training and experience in these procedures is offered on many levels and by many modalities.

A fully equipped microsurgical practice laboratory is available for resident use. The laboratory is equipped with a Zeiss operating microscope with foot-switch activation, and many surgical instruments. Eye bank tissue and cadaveric animal eyes are available for surgical practice. Residents are introduced to the laboratory early in their first year and are encouraged to use the laboratory throughout their residency. A surgical log is completed by each resident after their practice session and a log is kept for their practice surgical time and experience.

Residents are also taught on the various aspects of cataract surgery management utilizing a monthly Cataract Conference. Eye Institute full-time and part-time faculty members bring in cases and video tapes of surgical procedures for review and discussion, illustrating key points of surgical treatment and management. Residents are invited to bring video tapes and materials to discuss some of their own surgical experiences, particularly the third-year residents.

A structured, didactic, practical surgical skills curriculum has been developed, meeting monthly for an 18-month cycle. Monthly didactic and wet lab experience introduced residents to fundamental surgical principles and procedures with hands-on instruction and supervision by the faculty. These skills can then be reinforced in the surgical practice lab by the residents themselves at their own convenient times. The surgical skills practicum is conducted in the eye operating room, incorporating the actual equipment the residents would use during ophthalmic surgery. Incorporated into this curriculum is the annual Phacoemulsification Course held in Madison, Wisconsin, in conjunction with the University of Wisconsin-Madison and University of Iowa's Departments of Ophthalmology. It also includes the Orbital Dissection Course offered biennially.

Residents receive a progressive procedural and surgical experience through the course of their residency, based on the level of training and their individual progress. First year residents are supervised in the performance of certain anterior segment laser procedures, such as Yag Capsulotomy and Peripheral Iridotomy. First year residents also assist in strabismus, cataract, glaucoma, retinal and oculoplastic procedures. In addition to assisting in the same procedures, second year residents are supervised in performing strabismus surgery, glaucoma operations, and extracapsular cataract extractions with progression to phacoemulsification, as well as diabetic laser treatments and office based oculoplastic procedures. Third year residents have the majority of operative experience in cataract, oculoplastic, glaucoma and retinal surgeries, in addition to having opportunities to perform diabetic laser treatments. Second and third year residents are also supervised in the surgical management of the trauma patient.
Resident Application Procedures
Four residents per year are selected for the ϰϲͼ Ophthalmology Training Program. Applications for appointment to the ϰϲͼ Affiliated Hospitals Residency Training Program are processed through the Ophthalmology Matching Program, P.O. Box 7584, San Francisco, California 94120-7584. Contact the SF Match office by telephone at (415) 561-8535.

Fellowship Matches

  • 2024: Cornea (Washington U, UCLA), Retina (ϰϲͼ)
  • 2023: Glaucoma (Tufts Univ.), Pediatric Ophthalmology (Indiana), Uveitis (Northwestern)
  • 2022: Glaucoma (Cleveland Clinic), Retina (Mayo Clinic)
  • 2021: Uveitis (Northwestern), Pediatric Ophthalmology (ϰϲͼ), Retina (UVA)
  • 2020: Pediatric Ophthalmology (U of Michigan), Glaucoma (U of Michigan)
  • 2019: Glaucoma (Stanford), Plastics (MEEI)
  • 2018: Glaucoma (Indiana)
  • 2017: Glaucoma (UAB), Retina (Wilmer), Pediatric Ophthalmology (Northwestern)
  • 2016: Glaucoma (U of Oklahoma), Retina (ϰϲͼ)
  • 2015: Pediatric Ophthalmology (Children’s National: Washington DC)
  • 2014: Glaucoma (UW Madison)
  • 2013: Pediatric Ophthalmology (UCSD), Retina (Stanford)
  • 2012: Cornea (Utah)
  • 2011: Cornea (Minnesota)
  • 2009: Cornea (Mass Eye & Ear/Harvard)
  • 2008: Retina (ϰϲͼ), Glaucoma (Utah)
  • 2007: Glaucoma (Wills)
  • 2006: Medical Retina (Joslin/Harvard), Oculoplastics (UCLA)
  • 2005: Cornea (NYEEI), Glaucoma (Jules Stein/UCLA)

Contact for Residency Programs

Ophthalmology Residency

Contact information for the ophthalmology residency program at ϰϲͼ

SF Match Program Office (415) 561-8535

 

ϰϲͼ Ophthalmology Residency Program Director

Edward L. Randerson, MD

 

Medical Education Coordinator

Amanda Tan

atan@mcw.edu

 

 

Residency Program Inbox

Ophth-Residency@mcw.edu

 

Pediatric Optometry Residency

Contact information for the pediatric optometry residency program with ϰϲͼ and Children's Wisconsin

OR Match Program Office (800) 461-6322

 

ϰϲͼ and Children's Wisconsin Pediatric Optometry Residency Program Director

Tracey Strombeck, OD