Curriculum
Ambulatory Care
UCSF Fresno offers a unique blend of training with distinct urban and rural family health centers. All family medicine residents have an identified continuity clinic, which they select from 3 federally qualified health centers (FQHC) - Family Health Care Network (FHCN), United Health Centers in Parlier, or Camerena Health Center in Madera (see teaching sites for additional information on each site).
In addition to continuity care clinics, residents also partake in a wide variety of outpatient experiences, including pediatrics, women’s health, medical subspecialties, surgery/procedure-based services, behavioral health, geriatrics, and palliative care. These outpatient experiences take place at various teaching sites including FHCN, Veteran’s Administration Central California Health Care System, Alzheimer and Memory Center, Community Cancer Institute, and more.
Our family medicine faculty have many areas of expertise and specialty clinics where our residents can rotate through and expand their medical knowledge. These specialty clinics include:
Colposcopy Clinic (FHCN)
Gender Affirming Care (FHCN)
Harm Reduction Clinic
Hepatitis C Clinic (FHCN and UHC Parlier)
HIV clinic (specialty services clinic through CRMC)
Mobile Clinic (CSV)
Sports Medicine Clinic (FHCN and UHC)
Urgent care (Clinica Sierra Vista at Elm)
Inpatient Care
UCSF Fresno provides intensive, structured inpatient learning opportunities. Family medicine residents are assigned to teaching services at Community Regional Medical Center (CRMC) and Valley Children’s Health Care, the only pediatric hospital in the San Joaquin Valley.
The bulk of inpatient training is provided at Community Regional Medical Center (CRMC). Residents are supervised by family physicians skilled in inpatient and obstetric care on the Med D, FMI, and FMOB inpatient services. In addition, they work with a variety of outstanding specialists while on outside rotations.
Scholarly Projects
During their three years of training, residents complete one scholarly and one quality improvement project with extensive support and individualized expert assistance for their projects by family medicine research faculty and staff. They present their projects to their peers and members of the UCSF Fresno academic community during their third year of training. Residents have many opportunities for regional and national dissemination of their scholarly work, which is encouraged by the program.
Curriculum Committee
UCSF Fresno pays careful attention to its curricular offerings. A curriculum committee consisting of residents and faculty meets monthly to critically appraise our curricula. Each curricular area is reviewed every six months, and an in-depth analysis is done annually. Resident evaluations of rotations are reviewed, and the curriculum modified and updated as necessary.