ITU GME Opportunities

The American Indian Medical Education Strategies (AIMES) Alliance has created this tool to assist medical students in identifying existing physician graduate medical education (GME) programs offering rotations, longitudinal residencies, and fellowships at IHS, Tribal, and urban Indian medical facilities. The tool enables students to search for programs based on program type, tribal affiliation, specialty, and location. Check out the tool below and please share it with any medical students looking to serve tribal communities! 

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  • Program Type

    Fellowship

    Tribal Partner

    Maniilaq Association

    Description

    Fellows staff field clinics across Northwest Alaska, precept medical residents in our pathways program, and complete a social and community medicine curriculum taught by Harvard and community faculty. Siamit fellowship rotations are open to physicians from Massachusetts General Hospital, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and the University of Washington.

    Contact

    Lucas Trout
    Faculty Director
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Kotzebue, Alaska

  • Program Type

    Fellowship

    Tribal Partner

    Alaska Native Medical Center
    IHS - Pine Ridge

    Description

    Fellows in RIHT will benefit from the same mentorship support, didactic curriculum, leadership courses, and career development support the traditional two-year program. RIHT fellows will spend a total of two-thirds of their year honing clinical skills by providing care in under-resourced and culturally distinct settings with our domestic indigenous partners in Alaska or South Dakota. The other one-third of their year will be dedicated to a scholarly project within the community they are serving clinically. Their clinical experience will double as an additional opportunity in building rapport and understanding with the community, patients, and health system.

    Contact

    Dr. Laura Davis
    Program Director, Global and Rural Health Fellowship [email protected]

    Locations

    Anchorage, Alaska

    Pine Ridge, South Dakota

  • Program Type

    Fellowship

    Tribal Partner

    Alaska Native Medical Center
    IHS - Pine Ridge

    Description

    During the first year of the traditional two-year program, fellows will perform hospitalist and outpatient clinical work in Anchorage, AK, at the Alaska Native Medical Center or at Indian Health Services on the Pine Ridge Indians Reservation in South Dakota. Fellows may also be able to participate in health systems strengthening projects at their respective sites and may have the opportunity to supervise visiting medical students and residents at each clinical site.

    Contact

    Dr. Laura Davis
    Program Director, Global and Rural Health Fellowship [email protected]

    Locations

    Anchorage, Alaska

    Pine Ridge, South Dakota

  • Program Type

    Fellowship

    Tribal Partner

    IHS - Navajo Area

    Description

    The Global HEAL Program aims to train and transform healthcare professionals through immersive training, community building, strong mentorship, and improve how they serve their communities. Rotating fellows are U.S. trained Psychiatry, Family Medicine, Internal Medicine, and Pediatric physicians who have completed or will be in the final year of a residency program by the start of their fellowship. To apply to be a Rotating Fellow, you must have completed residency in the U.S. (HEAL can now sponsor some H1-B Visas). During the one-year fellowship, Rotating Fellows split their time between a U.S. site and an international site that serves resource-denied communities, working full-time and immersing themselves in each location.

    Contact

    Joseph Scarpelli
    Program Director
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Chinle, Arizona

    Gallup, New Mexico

  • Program Type

    Fellowship

    Tribal Partner

    IHS - Chinle
    IHS - Navajo Area

    Description

    The objective of the Global, Rural, and Underserved Child Health (GRUCH) Fellowship is to provide pediatricians the clinical exposure, academic opportunity, and mentorship to become leaders in global child health. Global, Rural, and Underserved Child Health Fellows work at the Chinle Service Unit in the heart of the Navajo Nation. There, the fellow's role will primarily be clinical and educational with additional avenues for community outreach and/or project development. The fellow's clinical responsibilities will be a combination of inpatient wards (including the newborn nursery), evening and weekend calls, and outpatient medicine within the Department of Pediatrics. Fellows actively participate in education within the department of pediatrics together with talented colleagues, nurses, and visiting residents, and medical students from across the country. There are also options to work in community-based adolescent clinics or with the public health nursing team or to seek other areas of community involvement if interested. Fellows will experience full autonomy in clinical decision-making, develop, implement, and assess quality improvement projects, encourage education and partnership between the University of Utah and CCHC, and provide a wide range of clinical care to the people of the Navajo Nation.

    Contact

    Dr. Jeff Robison
    Program Director
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Chinle, Arizona

  • Program Type

    Fellowship

    Tribal Partner

    IHS - Cheyenne River

    Description

    Fellows will work clinically in the emergency departments at Mount Sinai Morningside and Mount Sinai West. These hospitals are the bases for a PGY 1-3 EM residency with 60 residents and multiple associated fellowships. Fellows will have the opportunity to attend and teach at academic conferences at both hospitals as well as take advantage of the offerings of the Mount Sinai Health System, including those at The Mount Sinai Hospital. If interested, fellows can do part of their required clinical work at the Indian Health Service Cheyenne River Health Center at the Cheyenne River Indian Reservation in South Dakota (as available).

    Contact

    Dr. Jaime Eliades
    Co-Director
    Global Health Division
    Department of Emergency Medicine
    [email protected]

    Dr. Nita Avrith
    Fellowship Director
    Global Health Division
    Department of Emergency Medicine
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Eagle Butte, South Dakota

  • Program Type

    Fellowship

    Tribal Partner

    Oneida Nation

    Description

    The rural track extension of the Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Fellowship to Northeast Wisconsin was developed to address the mental health needs of youth in the rural parts the state. This rural pathway is an extension of the Milwaukee program. Fellows are immersed in multiple systems of care including public, private, medical, correctional, and behavioral health. Longitudinal experiences dedicated separately to therapy and medication management span the two years. Year Two involves working the Psychopharmacology Clinic at the Oneida Nation Community Health Center in Green Bay, WI. The rural track extension to the Child and Adolescent Fellowship Program at the Medical College of Wisconsin offers one position annually for two fellows.

    Contact

    Brenda Konczal
    Fellowship Coordinator
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Green Bay, Wisconsin

  • Program Type

    Fellowship

    Tribal Partner

    IHS - Rosebud

    Description

    The Rural Health Leadership Fellowship is a full-time fellowship, embedded with the award-winning Rural Medicine Program, that offers early-career physicians clinical experiences on the Rosebud Indian Reservation in South Dakota. Key components of the fellowship include focused clinical time in Rosebud, South Dakota at an Indian Health Service site (~12 weeks/year). Fellows serve clinically in Rosebud for approximately three months/year, split into one- or two-week rotations, with the rest of the time spent in Boston. While in Rosebud, fellows work in inpatient and outpatient settings, sharing a primary care panel with a close-knit team of co-fellows and faculty. The clinical partnership in Rosebud also offers opportunities for participation in and development of community-centered programs.

    Contact

    Stephanie Sun
    Fellowship Director
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Rosebud, South Dakota

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    Choctaw Nation

    NRMP code

    2162120C4

    Specialty

    Family Medicine

    Type

    Rotations

    Description

    Alliance Health Durant Residency Program helps rural communities by educating physicians and providing quality medical services. During the course of their three-year residency program, residents complete two weeks of psychiatry rotation, and a four week geriatric rotation at the Choctaw Tribal Health Services clinic in Durant.

    Contact

    Terry R. Gerard II, DO
    Program Director

    Mr. Chris Humble, Program Coordinator
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Durant, Oklahoma

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    Cherokee Nation

    NRMP code

    2171220C0

    Specialty

    OB/GYN

    Type

    Rotations

    Description

    The Osteopathic Medical Education Consortium of Oklahoma (OMECO)/OSU obstetrics and gynecology residency program trains residents in both rural and metropolitan areas. Residents have the opportunity to work in the labor and delivery units at two of Tulsa’s main hospitals - Saint Francis Hospital and OSU Medical Center. Residents spend time in additional facilities that round out their education and ensure competency working in both urban and rural communities. Residents complete a minimum of three months of training at the Cherokee Nations W.W. Hastings Hospital during their first two years of training and can complete additional elective time with Cherokee Nation Health Services.

    Contact

    Dr. Erin Brown
    Program Director


    Martha B Clemons
    Program Administrator
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Tulsa, Oklahoma

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    Menominee Nation

    NRMP code

    2262120C4

    Specialty

    Family Medicine

    Type

    Rotations

    Description

    The MCW Fox Valley Mosaic Family Medicine Residency is a joint collaboration between Mosaic Family Health, Ascension – WI, ThedaCare, the Medical College of Wisconsin, and the WiNC GME Consortium. Mosaic Family Health is the clinical home of the Fox Valley Family Medicine Residency Program. It is located in downtown Appleton, WI, approximately halfway between ThedaCare Regional Medical Center-Appleton and Ascension NE Wisconsin St. Elizabeth Hospital. Its patients represent a well-balanced mix of medical concerns, economic and cultural groups, and ages. The clinic’s 75 staff members include family medicine faculty, 21 residents, a clinical psychologist, a geriatric nurse practitioner, a behavioral health counselor, and a care manager.

    Contact

    Suzanne M. Blazek
    Education & Recruitment Coordinator
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Keshena, Wisconsin

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    Ho-Chunk Nation

    Specialty

    Family Medicine

    Type

    Rotations

    Description

    The Baraboo 1-2 RTT Family Medicine Residency Program trains residents in a rural setting, providing them with a lifestyle that truly mimics private practice in a rural community. The program offers a flexible “hybrid longitudinal curriculum” in an apprenticeship model, allowing residents to gain full-spectrum family medicine experience by participating in: hospital rounds, clinic, urgent care/ER call, hospital admissions, and obstetrics. In this setting, residents are involved in much of the hands-on continuity patient care.

    Contact

    Kellie Birkholz
    Residency Education Manager
    [email protected]

    Stuart Hannah
    Program Director
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Baraboo, Wisconsin

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    IHS - Rosebud

    Specialty

    Internal Medicine

    Type

    Rotations

    Description

    The Massachusetts General Hospital Primary Care Program aims to train excellent primary care doctors who will dedicate their careers to improving health equity in the Unites States through a diversity of careers such as clinicians, advocates, educators, researchers, and health systems leaders. We emphasize robust clinical training, exposure to systems innovating to improve the health of vulnerable populations, and building skills to be an agent of change in the health system. To prepare residents for careers improving health equity, we focus on exposing residents to innovative systems at Mass General caring for vulnerable populations, enabling residents to engage in that work and ground that in a curriculum designed to give each primary care resident a tool kit for advocacy to use throughout their career. Residents have the opportunity to learn about Indigenous health by performing elective rotations through a partnership with the Rosebud Sioux Tribe in Rosebud, South Dakota.

    Contact

    Dr. William Kormos
    Program Director
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Rosebud, South Dakota

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    IHS - Navajo Area

    Specialty

    Internal Medicine

    Type

    Rotations

    Description

    The Doris and Howard Hiatt Residency in Global Health Equity and Internal Medicine is a four-year program that leads to eligibility for certification by the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) and completion of a Masters Degree in Public Health through the Harvard School of Public Health. Prospective applicants must first apply to the Internal Medicine Residency at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. Accepted applicants may then submit an application to the Global Health Equity Residency in November of their first postgraduate year. Global Health Equity residents complete a total of 48 months of multi-disciplinary training.

    Contact

    Dr. Daniel Palazuelos
    Assistant Director
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Boston, Massachusetts

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Residency Program Name

    Alaska Family Medicine Residency

    Tribal Partner

    Alaska Native Medical Center
    Bristol Bay Area Health Corporation
    Yukon-Kuskokwim Health Corporation

    NRMP code

    1313120C0

    Specialty

    Family Medicine

    Type

    Rotations

    Description

    Alaska was the last state in the United States to have a residency program. There is only one residency program in Alaska – the Alaska Family Medicine Residency (AKFMR). AKFMR has been affiliated with the University of Washington since its inception. AKFMR provides rigorous training to help prepare residents to practice in any challenging setting, but particularly rural settings. Residents receive extra training in rural settings, emergency medicine, orthopedics, obstetrics, pediatrics, neonatal intensive care, and trans-cultural medicine to prepare them for the unique challenges of bush practice. The majority of inpatient rotations are at Providence Alaska Medical Center (PAMC), the largest hospital and primary medical referral center in Alaska. Rotations are also done at three Tribal medical centers. Inpatient and outpatient rotations also occur at the Alaska Native Medical Center (ANMC) in Anchorage, a 150-bed inpatient and outpatient facility. It has Alaska’s only Level 2 trauma center and is a referral center for all Native hospitals and clinics in the state. Many residents spend six weeks of their second year in Bethel, AK, serving the Yukon-Kuskokwim Health Corporation’s Yukon-Kuskokwim Health Delta Regional Hospital, a JCAHO-accredited facility. It is fully equipped for primary acute care medical services and has air transportation links to Anchorage hospitals. The population of the area is 89 percent Alaska Native, primarily Yup’ik, Chup’ik, and Inupiaq Eskimo, as well as Athabascan. A site for R2 rural rotations, Kanakanak Hospital is located in Dillingham, Alaska, and run by the Bristol Bay Area Health Corporation. Kanakanak Hospital is a 16-bed facility providing 24-hour medical, pediatric, and obstetrical care.

    Contact

    Defileen Abaya
    Residency Program Manager
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Dillingham, Alaska

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    Indian Health Center of Santa Clara Valley

    NRMP code

    1820120C0

    Specialty

    Family Medicine

    Type

    Longitudinal

    Description

    Established in 1977, the Stanford O’Connor Family Medicine Residency Program is part of a long tradition of excellence in the training of Family Medicine residents in the San Jose area since 1977. The residency is an unopposed 9-9-9 Family Medicine program at a county-owned community hospital in the heart of the South Bay Area. On call residents cover all areas of the hospital: medicine, pediatrics, ICU, and labor and delivery. The primary outpatient teaching site for the residency program is the Indian Health Center of Santa Clara Valley’s Family Medicine Center, located just across the street from O'Connor Hospital. The IHC Family Medicine Center is an FQHC that has 13 examination rooms and one procedure room. It also includes a laboratory and various clinic equipment, including a spirometer, video colposcope, dermatoscope, and ultrasound. It offers full-spectrum primary care at the FMC.

    Contact

    Dr. Grace Yu
    Program Director
    [email protected]

    Jena Eidschun
    Program Coordinator
    [email protected]

    Locations

    San Jose, California

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    Tuba City Regional Health Care Corporation

    NRMP code

    2243120C0

    Specialty

    Family Medicine

    Type

    Rotations

    Description

    The family medicine residency program seeks to extend the mission of North Country HealthCare in providing accessible, comprehensive, quality affordable care in a primary healthcare setting across northern Arizona. Rural rotations, along with elective rotations, are offered at Tuba City Regional Healthcare Corporation, a Tribal-owned 80-bed general hospital on the Navajo Nation. It is a busy medical center that serves as a referral center for the Navajo and Hopi communities and offers a wide variety of specialty services.

    Contact

    Beth Baillargeon
    Program Coordinator
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Tuba City, Arizona

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    SouthEast Alaska Regional Health Consortium

    NRMP code

    1015120C0

    Specialty

    Family Medicine

    Type

    Rotations

    Description

    The Alvernon Track of the Family Medicine Residency program emphasizes focuses on the Tucson community and surrounding areas with an underserved focus in a suburban/urban setting. The program is committed to preparing full-spectrum family physicians from diverse backgrounds, dedicated to social justice and health equity, and providing family-centered, community-responsive care for historically marginalized populations and those living in rural and other medically under-resourced areas. The residency program uses a 2+2 rotation structure. Residents alternate between twoweeks of non-FM clinic work and two weeks of outpatient work in the family medicine center, managing their continuity panel. Alvernon track residents are required to complete a two-week rotation at a rural pediatrics site and a one-week rotation at a rural gynecology site. Elective rotations are offered at one Tribal medical facility: the SouthEast Alaska Regional Health Consortium, an Alaska Native health organization in Juneau, AK.

    Contact

    Dr. Karyn B. Kolman
    Residency Program Director
    [email protected]

    Jade Diana Zamora
    Program Manager, FCM UA Residency / Sports Medicine
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Juneau, Alaska

    Tucson, Arizona

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    Fort Defiance Indian Hospital Board, Inc.
    IHS - Hopi Health Care
    IHS - Whiteriver
    SouthEast Alaska Regional Health Consortium
    Tuba City Regional Health Care Corporation

    NRMP code

    1371120C0

    Specialty

    Family Medicine

    Type

    Rotations

    Description

    The South Campus Track of the Family Medicine Residency program emphasizes rural practice and includes required rural rotations. The program is committed to preparing full-spectrum family physicians from diverse backgrounds, dedicated to social justice and health equity, and providing family-centered, community-responsive care for historically marginalized populations and those living in rural and other medically under-resourced areas. The residency program uses a 2+2 rotation structure. Residents alternate between two weeks of non-FM clinic work and two weeks of outpatient work in the family medicine center, managing their continuity panel. One of the unique aspects of the University of Arizona Family Medicine Residency Program’s South Campus track is the rural rotation requirement. Residents have the opportunity to choose from a number of clinical sites depending on their interests and plans for future practice. For the required rural rotations, housing, round-trip mileage, and food are provided by a grant from the Arizona Area Health Education Centers (AHEC). Required rural rotations, as well as elective rotations, are offered at the following Tribal medical facilities: Hopi Health Center, an Indian Health Service facility, Tuba City Regional Healthcare Corporation, a Tribal-owned 80-bed general hospital on the Navajo Nation, Whiteriver Indian Hospital, an Indian Health Service facility, SouthEast Alaska Regional Health Consortium, an Alaska Native health organization in Juneau, AK, and Tséhootsooí Medical Center, a 245,000 square foot acute care hospital located in Fort Defiance, AZ.

    Locations

    Whiteriver, Arizona

    Juneau, Alaska

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    IHS - Chinle
    Tuba City Regional Health Care Corporation

    NRMP code

    1652140C3

    Specialty

    Internal Medicine

    Type

    Rotations

    Description

    The University of Pittsburgh Internal Medicine Residency Program is known for its innovative curriculum and for the strong emphasis it places on ensuring the complete personal and professional development of each resident. The traditional categorical program comprises a mix of inpatient, subspecialty, and outpatient rotations. The Global Health and Underserved Populations Track (GHUP Track) is designed to train physician leaders in clinical medicine, education, health policy, and research in global health. At its foundation is a core internal medicine competency with a strong generalist perspective, cost-conscious practice, and back-to-basics diagnosis. Clinical training provides exposure to local and international sites, coupled with a curriculum and scholarly work designed to address health policy, public health, and social factors influencing health and disease in the global context. The Department of Medicine offers up to four positions in GHUP track each year. A four-week rotation in PGY-1 is performed at the IHS’s Chinle Comprehensive Health Care Facility in Chinle, AZ, or the Tuba City Regional Health Care Corporation on the Navajo Nation. The program has historically had residents spend time at the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes, but hasn't had anyone there since the beginning of the COIVD-19 pandemic.

    Contact

    Dr. Thuy Bui
    Director, Global Health and Underserved Populations Track;
    Director, Program for Health Care to Underserved Populations
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Tuba City, Arizona

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    Alaska Native Medical Center
    Yukon-Kuskokwim Health Corporation

    NRMP code

    1918320C1

    Specialty

    Pediatrics

    Type

    Rotations

    Description

    The University of Washington/Seattle Children’s Hospital has the only civilian pediatric residency program in the entire five-state WWAMI region. The Alaska Track was created to immerse a group of residents within the rich diversity of experiences that practicing medicine in Alaska has to offer. The track helps residents develop skills in community building, culturally competent care, and maximization of medical resources for patients throughout a vast geographic region. Each year, four residents match into the Alaska track. In each of the three years of residency, residents in the Alaska Track will spend eight months of the year in Seattle and the other four months in Alaska. The time in Alaska is focused on ambulatory rotations in two different practice settings. The sites are paired so that each resident spends two months in a setting that serves Alaska Native communities (Bethel or ANMC) and two months in a setting that serves the general population. Rotations take place at one Anchorage site and one site outside of Anchorage, either Bethel or Fairbanks. Rotations include time at one of two Tribal medical facilities. The first is Alaska Native Medical Center (ANMC) in Anchorage, a 150-bed inpatient and outpatient facility. It has Alaska’s only Level 2 trauma center and is a referral center for all Native hospitals and clinics in the state. Residents primarily work at Southcentral Foundation’s Field Health Clinic caring for Alaska Native children from across Alaska with complex medical issues who come to Anchorage for pediatric and subspecialty services. The other is Yukon-Kuskokwim Health Corporation’s Yukon-Kuskokwim Health Delta Regional Hospital, a JCAHO-accredited facility. It is fully equipped for primary acute care medical services and has air transportation links to Anchorage hospitals. Residents spend most of their time in the outpatient clinics and see complex patients from around the region. Residents also spend time on the inpatient unit working with Health Aides to care for children remotely in their villages. Second and third year residents have the opportunity to travel to a village for a week of field clinic.

    Contact

    https://sites.uw.edu/uwpeds/alaska-track/contact/

    Locations

    Bethel, Alaska

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    IHS - Cheyenne River

    NRMP code

    1105110C0

    Specialty

    Emergency Medicine

    Type

    Rotations

    Description

    In Mount Sinai Hospital Emergency Department, residents learn to treat very complicated patients across the spectrum of illness, from pulmonary hypertension to Crohn's disease to illnesses related to transplanted organs. The ED receives more than 100,000 adult and pediatric patient visits yearly. Residents also have the opportunity to spend time at the IHS Cheyenne River Health Center during their PGY3 and PGY4 electives.

    Contact

    Claribel Velasquez
    Residency Coordinator
    [email protected]
    Dr. Elaine Rabin
    Residency Director
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Eagle Butte, South Dakota

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Residency Program Name

    Boston Children's Hospital Pediatric Indigenous Health Care Residency Rotation at Boston

    Tribal Partner

    IHS - Turtle Mountain

    Specialty

    Pediatrics

    Type

    Rotations

    Description

    The Pediatric Indigenous Health Care residency rotation at Boston Children’s offers residents an in-depth experience working with Native American children and communities. This rotation includes clinical placements at two Great Plains Area Indian Health Services Hospitals: Cheyenne River Health Center in South Dakota and Quentin Burdick Hospital in the Turtle Mountain Service Unit in North Dakota. Residents will be supervised by Boston Children’s faculty at these sites and will follow a comprehensive curriculum tailored to introduce them to the specific healthcare needs and cultural considerations of Native American populations. The rotation aims to provide residents with a meaningful exposure to the challenges and rewards of working within these communities. Residents may spend up to one month at either site. Preference is given to Native American trainees, those from medical schools in the Great Plains region, and residents from Boston Children’s combined residency program.

    Contact

    Dr. Julia Rubin-Smith
    Director, Indigenous Health Program
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Belcourt, North Dakota

    Eagle Butte, South Dakota

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    Fort Defiance Indian Hospital Board, Inc.

    NRMP code

    1286320C0

    Specialty

    Pediatrics

    Type

    Rotations

    Description

    The REACH (Residents Educated in All Cultures and Health) Initiative has been bringing together those at Baystate Medical Center who are interested in international health and cultural diversity and are concerned for the world at large, particularly in medically underserved areas. Baystate Medical Center has an affiliation with the Fort Defiance Indian Hospital Board on the Navajo Reservation which is located on the border of Arizona and New Mexico. This is a one-month, call-free elective in outpatient pediatrics. Residents can also rotate through inpatient service, nursery, and the emergency room.

    Contact

    Dr. Katherine Horan
    REACH Director
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Fort Defiance, Arizona

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    IHS - Whiteriver

    NRMP code

    2154110C0

    Specialty

    Emergency Medicine

    Type

    Rotations

    Description

    Creighton University School of Medicine – Phoenix’s residency program in Emergency Medicine is committed to training the best emergency medicine residents. Residents rotate at the IHS Whiteriver Indian Hospital on the Fort Apache Reservation. Residents also rotate through three adult Level 1 trauma center emergency departments and three trauma center pediatric emergency departments in the Valley of the Sun.

    Contact

    Michele "Miki" Floring
    Department of Emergency Medicine
    Valleywise Health Medical Center
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Whiteriver, Arizona

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    IHS - Warm Springs

    NRMP code

    1599120C4

    Specialty

    Family Medicine

    Type

    Rotations

    Description

    The Three Sisters Rural Track Program is a three-year family medicine program, and is the first and only GME program in Central Oregon. Three residents per class will spend their intern year in Portland training at the Oregon Health & Science University, followed by two years at St. Charles Madras, a critical access hospital, with clinical experiences also at Mosaic Community Health - Madras Health Center and IHS Warm Springs.

    Contact

    Dr. Jinnell Lewis
    Residency Director
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Warm Springs, Oregon

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    IHS - Rosebud

    Specialty

    Dermatology
    Internal Medicine
    Pediatrics

    Type

    Rotations

    Description

    The Global Medicine Pathway is for residents in the internal medicine, medicine-pediatrics and medicine-dermatology residency programs. Residents may complete a one-two month rotation after their intern year of residency. In Rosebud, South Dakota, residents have the opportunity to participate in direct patient care and community health services for the Sicangu Lakota Oyate (Rosebud Sioux Tribe). Residents work with community and Indian Health Service agency partners to assist in providing direct patient care, aiding the tribe if requested in health program promotion, and developing and strengthening collaborative relationships.

    Contact

    Dr. Michael Sundberg
    Site Director
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Rosebud, South Dakota

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    IHS - Rosebud
    IHS - White Earth

    Specialty

    Pediatrics

    Type

    Rotations

    Description

    The Global Pediatrics Track is a combination of competency-based curriculum, evening programming, and elective experiences designed to give pediatric and medicine-pediatric residents a breadth of knowledge and skills for medical service for underserved children in or from low-resourced areas of the world. Residents have opportunities for clinical electives at international partner sites and Native American child health in South Dakota and Minnesota.

    Contact

    Dr. Michael Sundberg
    Rosebud and White Earth Lead Contact
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Ogema, Minnesota

    Rosebud, South Dakota

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    Confederated Salish Kootenai Tribes
    IHS - Browning

    NRMP code

    1524120C0 1524120C1

    Specialty

    Family Medicine

    Type

    Rotations

    Description

    The Family Medicine Residency of Western Montana (FMRWM) is a three-year Family Medicine program, sponsored by The University of Montana. FMRWM is the only Family Medicine residency program in Western Montana. The core program is based in Missoula, where all residents complete their first year of training. The American Indian Health Track provides residents with enhanced experience in the care and service of Indigenous people in Montana to reduce significant gaps in health equity. In addition to core program curriculum, residents in the American Indian Health Track participate in focused rotations with local partners including Confederated Salish Kootenai Tribal Health, Indian Health Service Browning Community Hospital, and All Nations Urban Indian Clinic; have the opportunity to deliver care in various types of health care settings dedicated to serving Indigenous populations; have access to Indigenous and non-Indigenous mentors; explore and identify ways to weave traditional healing into Western medicine; complete an American Indian/Alaska Native-focused curriculum that is tailored to individual needs and backgrounds; engage in scholarly activity, leadership, and policy focused on American Indian health; and attend education and recruiting events, including conferences of the Association of American Indian Physicians.

    Contact

    Dr. Rob Stenger
    Program Director
    [email protected]

    Locations

    St. Ignatius, Montana

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    Cherokee Indian Hospital Authority

    NRMP code

    3023120C0

    Specialty

    Family Medicine

    Type

    Rotations

    Description

    Mountain Area Health Education Center (MAHEC) was established in 1974 and serves a 16-county region in Western North Carolina. As part of the Family Medicine program, residents have the opportunity to perform elective rotations at the Cherokee Indian Hospital Residents will also engage in a structured curriculum in cultural humility during this rotation.

    Contact

    Lisa LaVallee, MD
    Program Director
    Family Medicine Residency

    Locations

    Cherokee, North Carolina

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    Cherokee Indian Hospital Authority

    Specialty

    Internal Medicine

    Type

    Longitudinal

    Description

    Mountain Area Health Education Center (MAHEC) was established in 1974 and serves a 16-county region in Western North Carolina. As part of the Internal Medicine Tribal Track, participating residents will rotate at Cherokee Indian Hospital for at least a part of their PGY1 year, spending much more of their PGY2 and PGY3 years at Cherokee Indian Hospital. Clinical experiences will include inpatient care in a 16-bed hospital unit, ED care, primary care clinics, specialty clinics, and addiction medicine experiences. Residents will also engage in a structured curriculum in cultural humility during this rotation.

    Contact

    Beth Roe
    Internal Medicine Residency Program Administrator
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Cherokee, North Carolina

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    Cherokee Indian Hospital Authority

    NRMP code

    3023140C1

    Specialty

    Internal Medicine

    Type

    Rotations

    Description

    Mountain Area Health Education Center (MAHEC) was established in 1974 and serves a 16-county region in Western North Carolina. As part of the Internal Medicine program, all residents will rotate 4 weeks during their PGY2 year at the Cherokee Indian Hospital in both the ambulatory and inpatient settings. Clinical experiences will include inpatient care in a 16-bed hospital unit, ED care, primary care clinics, specialty clinics and addiction medicine experiences. Residents will also engage in a structured curriculum in cultural humility during this rotation.

    Contact

    Beth Roe
    Internal Medicine Residency Program Administrator
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Cherokee, North Carolina

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    Northern Valley Indian Health

    NRMP code

    1200500008

    Specialty

    Family Medicine

    Type

    Rotations & Longitudinal

    Description

    Accredited by the ACGME and affiliated with UC Davis, the residency offers a comprehensive, full-spectrum training in family medicine. The residency partners with Northern Valley Indian Health (NVIH) and residents will spend one month of outpatient pediatrics in PGY1 and PGY2 at the NVIH outpatient clinic site. Some residents will be assigned to NVIH as their Continuity Clinic site which will provide their longitudinal FM continuity patient panel and additional FM clinic month rotations in PGY2 and PGY3.

    Contact

    Dr. Natalie Ladine
    Program Director
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Chico, California

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    IHS - Shiprock

    NRMP code

    1962120C1

    Type

    Longitudinal

    Description

    Shiprock-University of New Mexico (SUNM) Family Medicine Residency is the first federal Indian Health Service (IHS) residency program, and the only residency program on Navajo Nation (Diné Bikéyah). SUNM is a 1+2 program where residents train at the University of New Mexico during their first year, and then at Northern Navajo Medical Center (an IHS facility) in Shiprock during Years 2 and 3.

    Contact

    Heather Kovich
    Program Director
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Shiprock, New Mexico

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    Cherokee Nation

    NRMP code

    2171320C0

    Specialty

    Pediatrics

    Type

    Rotations

    Description

    Accredited by ACGME as a Rural Track of the OSU-COM pediatrics program, residents complete their continuity clinic at the Cherokee Nation Health System in Tahlequah, OK, along with a total of 14 months during their residency training. Rotations at Cherokee Nation – Continuity Clinic + PGY1: seven months + PGY2: three months + PGY3: four months.

    Contact

    Ms. Jodi Sells
    Program Coordinator – Tribal Track
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Tahlequah, Oklahoma

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    Chapa-De Indian Health

    NRMP code

    1200500003

    Specialty

    Family Medicine

    Type

    Rotations

    Description

    The Sierra Nevada Family Medicine Residency Program is an integrated rural training program based out of the Dignity Health Methodist Hospital of Sacramento Family Medicine Residency Program. Residents complete their intern year (PGY-1) at Methodist Hospital and Mercy Family Medical Clinic in Sacramento, CA. In their 2nd and 3rd years (PGY-2 and PGY-3), residents train in Grass Valley, CA, at Chapa-De Indian Health Clinic (Tribal FQHC), Sierra Nevada Memorial Hospital, and local subspecialty outpatient offices.

    Contact

    Dr. Glenn Gookin
    Rural Training Program Director; [email protected]

    Locations

    Sacramento, California

  • NRMP code

    2171120C2

    Specialty

    Family Medicine

    Type

    Longitudinal

    Description

    The Chickasaw Nation Family Medicine Residency (CNFMR) is working fulfill the Chickasaw Nation’s mission to enhance the overall quality of life of the Chickasaw people, while assisting other First American citizens and the greater community. The program offers training sites at Chickasaw Nation Medical Center, three Chickasaw Nation Department of Health satellite health clinics, and five affiliated sites. First-year residents spend much of the year rotating through different services of the hospital and clinics with residents spending one to two sessions a week in the Family Medicine Residency Clinic. During the second year there is an increasing focus on ambulatory care, with residents spending two to four sessions a week in the Family Medicine Residency Clinic. The third year curriculum is almost entirely focused on ambulatory care.

    Contact

    Todd Wallace
    Program Coordinator
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Ada, Oklahoma

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    Choctaw Nation

    NRMP code

    2171120C1

    Specialty

    Family Medicine

    Type

    Longitudinal

    Description

    The Choctaw Nation Family Medicine Residency Program is a traditionally osteopathic-focused family medicine residency program that accepts DO and MD applicants. It is operated by the Choctaw Nation Health Services and headquartered at the Choctaw Nation Health Care Center, a 140,000-square-foot health facility with 44 hospital beds for inpatient care and 52 outpatient exam rooms. The residency program block schedule is tailored to satisfy ACGME requirements for training family medicine physicians. The curriculum offers well-rounded and balanced training sufficient to allow graduates to practice full-spectrum family medicine as well as offer them time to pursue special interests via elective rotations.

    Contact

    Eric Gillette,
    Program Director
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Talihina, Oklahoma

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    Puyallup Tribe of Indians

    NRMP code

    2209120C0

    Specialty

    Family Medicine

    Type

    Longitudinal

    Description

    Puyallup Tribe of Indians is located in Pierce County, Washington. The family medicine residency has Osteopathic Recognition strives to be integrative and teach residents strategies for working with Native American Traditional Medicine approaches and prepare residents to care for underserved Native communities. Residents at PTHA train primarily at two core sites (MultiCare Tacoma General Hospital and the Takopid Clinic) and rural training at Indian Health Services Sites across WWAMI regions. Obstetric training in the first year occurs at both Tacoma General and Auburn, WA. Opportunities for rural electives are available as well.

    Contact

    Amy Lind
    Residency Program Manager
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Tacoma, Washington

  • NRMP code

    2171120C3

    Specialty

    Family Medicine

    Type

    Longitudinal

    Description

    The Cherokee Nation Family Medicine Residency Program offers Primary Care Track emphasis on a three-year curriculum. Each program year consists of four-week rotations that are completed within various clinics. The Cherokee Nation operates 11 health care facilities including nine tribal health centers, one employee health center, and one tribal hospital.

    Contact

    Dr. Dustin Beck
    Program Director
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Tahlequah, Oklahoma

  • Program Type

    Residency

    Tribal Partner

    Seattle Indian Health Board

    NRMP code

    1755120C5

    Specialty

    Family Medicine

    Type

    Rotations

    Description

    The Seattle Indian Health Board (SIHB) residency program provides a unique opportunity to train in a federally qualified community health center with a team of dedicated family physicians, nursing professionals, traditional healers, and community outreach specialists. Residents are encouraged to participate in a wide range of community outreach programs and work with SIHB traditional healing practitioners. Residents also have a unique opportunity to get involved with research and policy through the SIHB data and research division, Urban Indian Health Institute. Residents share their training and patients with other family medicine residents from the Swedish Family Medicine Residency Program, Cherry Hill, and are required to spend at least one elective month working at another Indian Health Service (IHS) center of their choosing (urban, rural, or tribal) in their first or second year of training.

    Contact

    Dr. Kimberly Kardonsky
    Family Medicine Residency Director
    [email protected]

    Locations

    Seattle, Washington

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