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University of Utah Occupational Medicine Clinics

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    • Redwood Health Center & South Jordan Health Center

      This is the core Occupational Medicine Clinical rotation for our residents. Residents work directly with our expert Occupational Medicine faculty for approximately 2-4 weeks in the PM1 year, 12 weeks in the PM2 year, and as an ongoing continuity clinical experience.  The clinics provide acute, sub-acute and chronic care for patients with occupational injuries and illnesses. The clinics also serve various businesses and government organizations in the region with services including fitness-for-duty evaluations, pre-placement evaluations, Commercial Driver Medical Evaluations (CDME), hazardous chemical medical evaluation, asbestos evaluations, and a wide range of other specialty consultative evaluations regarding possible occupational and environmental exposures. Residents may also be directly involved in field investigations and inspections of site facilities to develop an understanding of program development and administration within the context of a community based occupational medicine clinic.  Residents gain increasing levels of responsibility through their training, and develop core competencies in state-of-the-art practice of primary and tertiary Occupational Medicine

Industrial Rotations

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    • Chevron, Houston, TX

      This rotation includes experience in the development, management and evaluation of comprehensive occupational and environmental health programs within one of the world's largest energy company that is a multinational corporation with global activities. Residents learn medical basis of fitness to work issues, evaluate industry employees for fitness to work within specific industrial settings and occupational demands. They also learn multinational and multicultural aspects of occupational medicine practice, develop expertise in travel health consultation and medical orientations for Expatriate employees and their families and corporate business travelers.

    • Hill Air Force Base, Layton, UT

      This site provides the residents with experience at an occupational and environmental health clinic within a major military base. This clinic provides comprehensive services to civilian and military employees (n=20,000) involved in a huge variety of activities related to military aircraft maintenance and overhaul. These activities include numerous ‘shops' each analogous to a manufacturing plant with unique exposures. The resident works with occupational medicine, safety, industrial hygiene, environmental health, and management personnel.

    • NASA, Kennedy Space Center, FL

      This preceptorship provides residents with experience providing comprehensive health and safety support at a large government aerospace facility. Residents learn the unique health and safety problems and programs present in a major aerospace manufacturing operation. They participate in job task analysis, evaluate work-relatedness of reported illnesses and injuries, review medical surveillance and screening programs, and gain experience in administrative and management aspects of health care programs.

    • Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, Bremerton, WA

      The Puget Sound Naval Shipyard in Bremerton, WA services many different types of naval ships and submarines. Residents at this site learn the occupational hazards associated with shipbuilding and a variety of industrial processes and work practices, including work in machine and paint shops, work with radiation sources and confined spaces. The occupational health providers at this site conduct extensive hazardous materials medical surveillance programs for military and civilian workers. In addition, residents learn the intricacies associated with fitness for duty determinations. Residents work with a health and safety team that includes industrial hygienists, an occupational health nurse, safety specialists and occupational medicine practitioners.

    • Toxicology and Occupational Diseases, Albuquerque, NM

      This rotation includes site visits to several sites in the Albuquerque area, including Intel, Honeywell Defense Avionics and Ethicon (a Johnson and Johnson company). Residents work with a board certified toxicologist who provides workplace medical services, evaluation, and consultation.

    • Workers Compensation Fund, Salt Lake City, UT

      This preceptorship is highly diverse with a schedule developed and tailored to upcoming events and a resident's interests. This rotation facilitates a comprehensive understanding of the entire worker's compensation system at the largest insurer in the state of Utah (~65% of the insured market). Activities include: working with the Medical Director reviewing claims, site visits and analyses of exposures with Industrial Hygienists, Ergonomists, Safety Specialists, understanding claims processing from an examiners viewpoint to facilitate the payment of reports upon graduation from residency(!), attending select educational Seminars of interest, working with specialists regarding injury reporting, fraud investigation, vocational rehabilitation activities, medical case management and meetings with claims adjusters. Additional opportunities include research investigations, depositions and workers compensation hearings to understand these matters from the standpoint of an insurer.
       

Populations-Based Rotations

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    • Utah Department of Environmental Quality, Salt Lake City, UT

      This preceptorship provides an experience in investigating environmental health concerns, participating in regulatory development and implementation processes, and interacting with state and local legislators.

    • Utah Labor Commission, Salt Lake City, UT

      During this rotation, residents gain experience with the workers' compensation system from the standpoint of evaluations and applications, claims adjustments, emergency response team, and Utah OSHA programs.

    • Utah Department of Health, Salt Lake City, UT

      This preceptorship provides experience in occupational health legislative and administrative activities as well as opportunities to participate in investigations of occupational and environmental health problems.

    • Veterans Affairs Administration, Salt Lake City, UT

      Residents gain experience in administrative and management aspects of health care programs at the Veterans Affairs Hospital, including the following: defining hospital and agency goals, priorities, and structure; planning, designing, and implementing programs to meet new occupational and environmental and other health requirements while supporting organizational goals; preparing and advocating budgets; establishing occupational environmental health and safety staffing requirements; complying with legal and regulatory occupational and environmental health and safety requirements; using formal and informal communication channels, including participation in appropriate management meetings; and interacting with the media.

    • National Institutes for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), Morgantown, WV; Cincinnati, OH; Anchorage, AK

      Participating residents gain knowledge about the organizational structure of NIOSH and how NIOSH responds to requests for assistance from regulatory agencies such as OSHA and EPA. They learn how to conduct an epidemiological investigation of health-related complaints of workers and participate in one or more worksite evaluations and accomplish a public health project during the rotation period.

    • Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR), Atlanta, GA

      Residents gain experience working with a federal agency (part of the Centers for Disease Control) that serves the public by responding to public health toxicological exposure concerns and providing health information to prevent harmful exposures and disease related to toxic substances. Residents learn the toxicological profiling activities, organization, and work practices of the agency.

    • US Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), Washington, DC

      This site provides experience at a national occupational health regulatory agency. Residents gain experience in regulatory, enforcement, and consultative services of OSHA. Residents assist in research and report writing for cases or questions that are submitted to the Office of Occupational Medicine in the U.S. Department of Labor. OSHA requires a minimum 2 month rotation in Washington, DC.

    • Civil Aerospace Medical Institute, Oklahoma City, OK

      Residents gain experience in the preventive, occupational, environmental, human factors, and regulatory aspects of civil aviation medicine. Residents gain understanding and experience in the Aeromedical certification process. They learn commercial aviation industry medical surveillance program requirements and develop skills necessary to interpret surveillance data. Residents develop an approach to investigate occupational health questions or problems within the aviation environment and gain familiarity with aviation-specific health hazards.
       

Common Clinical Rotations in Utah 

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    • Emergency Medicine
    • Pulmonology
    • Ophthalmology
    • Dermatology
    • Sports Medicine
    • Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
    • Physical Therapy
    • Neurology
    • Radiology
    • Rheumatology
    • Orthopedics
       

Other Rotations 

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    • WorkforceQA (Medical Review Officer rotation)--Murray, UT