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Fellowships

We know it might be a little early to start thinking about fellowships, but here are some of the fellowships we offer at George Washington. As a resident, you can get involved with any of the fellows or faculty that run the fellowships.

Critical Care
Director: Danielle Davison, M.D. ddavison@mfa.gwu.edu
2 year ACGME accredited fellowship offered through the Department of Anesthesia and Critical Care Medicine; Emergency Medicine graduates will be eligible for board certification through the internal medicine pathway.
Disaster and Operational Medicine
Director: James Phillips, M.D., EMT-T jamesphillips@mfa.gwu.edu
This unique fellowship, centered among all the resources that only Washington, D.C. can provide, is designed to educate the Fellows in the concepts of disaster medicine and emergency management, medical operations in resource-limited and austere environments, and mass-gathering event medicine. The fellowship can be tailored to fit particular career interests and educational goals. We offer educational experiences with hospital, university, district and, federal partners. Elective opportunities are available in tactical medicine, medical counterterrorism studies, event management, etc. The fellowship is ideally completed over two years, which allows time for the fellow to obtain their choice of Master’s Degree from GWU and obtain the security clearances required for some rotations. A one-year fellowship is offered but will exclude the degree program and secure access.
Medical Education Fellowship
Director: Claudia Ranniger, M.D., Ph.D.
cranniger@mfa.gwu.edu
The program, with a concentration in Simulation, is a 1 year mentored program which combines educational requirements, research, and clinical experience to provide a comprehensive education in the use of simulation in medical education.
Medical Leadership and Operations Fellowship
Directors: Erin Kane M.D.
Robert Shesser M.D., M.P.H.
erkane@mfa.gwu.edu
The Medical Leadership and Operations Fellowship is designed to prepare graduates of Emergency Medicine residency programs for roles as physician leaders. The two-year curriculum covers ED administration, hospital medical direction, telemedicine, value-based care, and other aspects of health care delivery. Fellows will participate in research, prepare scholarly work for publication, and may pursue an optional MBA.
Extreme Environmental Medicine
Director: John Lafleur, M.D., M.P.H. jlafleur@mfa.gwu.edu
The program is one year for US graduates and two year for international graduates. Fellows are trained to identify and treat unique health problems when operating in an unusual and remote environment with limited resources, significant clinical autonomy, and no access to definitive health care systems.
Health Policy
Director: Aisha Liferidge M.D.
aliferidge@mfa.gwu.edu
Fellows pursue a didactic fellowship curriculum and have the opportunity to rotate through  congressional or federal agency offices. Fellows will work on a variety of policy-related contracts and research projects. Pursuit of a master in public health (MPH) degree or certificate in health policy in the Milken Institute School of Public Health is highly encouraged.
International Emergency Medicine & Global Public Health
Director: Katherine Douglass, M.D., M.P.H.  kdouglass@mfa.gwu.edu
Fellows actively participate in the implementation of new and ongoing educational, clinical, and prehospital emergency medicine projects and programs throughout the world. Pursuit of an MPH degree and collaboration with the Department of Global Health in GW’s Milken Institute School of Public Health is emphasized.
Clinical Research
Director: Melissa McCarthy, Sc.D., MS   melmccar@gwu.edu
This specialized two-year clinical research fellowship provides a unique opportunity for advanced professional training, including the opportunity to pursue a master of science (MS) or an MPH degree. This fellowship focuses on developing robust research skills, with special emphasis on clinical research design, critical appraisal of the literature, statistical analysis, presentation of results, manuscript preparation, and grant writing. Direct mentorship is key to the success of this fellowship, and fellows will have the opportunity to work with clinical researchers in various fields with funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), foundation, and industry.
Medical Toxicology
Director: Cathleen Clancy, M.D.
cat@poison.org
In this ACGME-accredited program, fellows provide telephone and bedside consultations through the National Capital Poison Center and several area hospitals. Coursework in research and policy aspects of toxicology is offered through the NIH and GW’s Milken Institute School of Public Health and School of Law.
Telemedicine
Director: Neal Sikka, M.D.
nsikka@mfa.gwu.edu
The program provides an opportunity for collaboration among emergency medicine faculty and faculty in other medical and surgical disciplines as well as engineering and business. We aspire to enable physicians to develop clinical competence in the delivery of telemedicine, leadership in establishing new programs, basic technical knowledge of telehealth delivery, and experience in order to significantly impact the rapidly growing and changing field of telemedicine, telehealth, remote health monitoring and mobile health.
Ultrasound
Director: Kat Ogle,  M.D.
kogle@mfa.gwu.edu
Fellows gain expertise in clinical applications of bedside ultrasound, learn aspects of U.S. program administration, and participate in an active training curriculum and perform research. Fellows work toward RDMS certification during fellowship.