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Elective Rotations

Fellows at Adolescent Medicine Health Fair
Fellows at Adolescent Medicine Health Fair

Hospital-Based Electives

  • Transition, Â鶹ÊÓƵ
    Fellows learn to identify issues and the latest recommendations regarding transition of care for chronically ill patients from pediatric to adult providers by working in a coordinated way within multiple subspecialty sites such as the Complex Care Center, Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics Clinic, the Cystic Fibrosis Center, the Medical Genetics Clinic, and the Long-Term Cancer Survivors Program.
  • Strong Recovery Outpatient Chemical Dependency Services
    Fellows learn to provide a wide range of outpatient substance use disorder treatment options for 14-24 year olds including medication assisted treatment and treatment for co-occurring mental health diagnoses.
  • Â鶹ÊÓƵInpatient Chemical Dependency Program
    Fellows experience inpatient care for patients with substance use disorders.
  • Pediatric HIV Program
    Fellows have the opportunity to learn screening and diagnostic care of adolescent patients whom attend the University of Rochester’s Pediatric HIV Program, as well as young adults at the University’s AIDS Center.
  • Sports Medicine, Â鶹ÊÓƵ
    Fellows learn to evaluate adolescents with recreational and competitive sports injuries at the University Sports Medicine practice within the University’s Department of Orthopedics and Rehabilitation.
  • Toxicology, Â鶹ÊÓƵ
    Fellows have the opportunity to work with Medical Toxicologists and the Toxicology Consult Service at the Â鶹ÊÓƵ. They assist with inpatient and emergency department consults to learn to recognize and treat the signs and symptoms of drug overdose and withdrawal.
  • Functional Medicine, Â鶹ÊÓƵ
    Fellows work with an expert psychologist in the Department of Neurology to learn the diagnosis and management of complex somatoform disorders.
  • Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
    Fellows learn to evaluate and treat common psychiatric conditions in adolescents such as major depressive disorder, generalized anxiety disorder and ADD/ADHD.
  • Pediatric Endocrinology, Â鶹ÊÓƵ
    Fellows see patients with our pediatric endocrinologists at the Â鶹ÊÓƵ to learn to evaluate and treat common endocrine conditions of adolescence.
  • Administrative Experience
    Fellows spend at least one half-day with each of our faculty members to gain exposure to and experience with common administrative tasks performed by adolescent medicine physicians in both academic and community settings.

Community-Based Electives


  • During the Adolescent Medicine Fellowship Program, fellows help evaluate and manage adolescent reproductive health conditions, including diagnosis and counseling options related to pregnancy, birth control, and abortion.
  • Monroe County Health Department STD Clinic
    Fellows help see patients at our county STD clinic. Teens in Rochester have some of the highest rates of gonorrhea and chlamydia in the country; for adolescents ages 15-19 years, there is one case of chlamydia for every 10 teens.

  • Fellows learn screening and diagnostic care of patients with HIV as well as interdisciplinary and coordinated primary care for LGBT individuals.

  • Fellows have the opportunity to see primary care and reproductive health patients in their own high schools within the Rochester City School District, serving a high risk inner city population with one of the lowest four-year graduation rates in the country.

  • Fellows care for college students and other members of the University of Rochester college community. Services include primary care, acute care, gynecological care, and chronic illness management.

MD and Nurses

  • Rochester Institute of Technology University Health Services
    Fellows treat college students under the supervision of the program director at the and the They learn to evaluate and treat common acute and chronic conditions of young adults, including patients who are deaf. Fellows also have the opportunity to learn to work with sign interpreters.

  • Delivering child abuse response, healing and prevention through collaborative service, awareness, education and leadership.
  • Industry School (Juvenile Justice Facility) Office of Child & Family Services
    Fellows help evaluate and manage the health care of adolescent males in a limited security state facility.

  • Fellows learn to screen for and assess an adolescent’s chemical dependency problems at a residential program that offers in-house chemical dependency treatment and a variety of therapeutic approaches for adolescent boys.

  • Our compassionate team is here to help people recover from eating disorders. Our treatment approach is rooted in the belief that eating disorders are diseases of disconnection.

  • Fellows help provide primary care to teens at a federally-funded community health center in Brockport, NY which serves a migrant farm-working community.

  • Fellows work with a pediatrics-trained dermatologist in a private practice to diagnose and treat adolescents with common dermatologic issues.