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Curriculum

The curriculum for the Endocrinology Fellowship varies for the National Institutes of Health (NIH)-Sponsored Track or the Clinical Scholar Track. Training for those in the Clinical Scholar Track varies depending on their career goals. However, all clinical training includes patient care, procedures, elective rotations, didactic training, and teaching opportunities.

Rotation descriptions and highlights

Didactic training

Staff endocrinologists perform bedside instruction and one-on-one informal teaching as a key teaching method on all rotations. Clinical case and topical conferences and research seminars presented by fellows, small discussion groups with expert faculty, and journal clubs are integral parts of the Endocrinology Fellowship.

Workshops and lectures are used to introduce basic concepts of diabetes technology, thyroid ultrasound, communication and professionalism, quality improvement, cross-cultural medicine, medical education skills, manuscript preparation, and grant writing.

The program scheduling, curriculum, and evaluation are all managed by MedHub. Extensive electronic resources, including e-books and online journal access, are provided by the Mayo Clinic Libraries. You can expect most, if not all, of the educational resources you'll need to be provided by the program.

Conferences

In addition to conferences in the Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes, Metabolism, and Nutrition, you may find topics of special interest in the dozens of other conferences given daily at Mayo Clinic. Many of these are available as video on demand.

The division's weekly conference schedule includes:

  • Monday — Fellows' case discussion with an expert faculty member or monthly clinical journal club*
  • Tuesday — Endocrine research seminar
  • Wednesday — Endocrine grand rounds (morning) and medical grand rounds (noon)
  • Thursday — Core curriculum lecture series
  • Friday — Fellows' conference*

*Fellows present at these conferences.

Research opportunities

The Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes, Metabolism, & Nutrition is known internationally for the breadth and depth of its research activities, with expertise in practically every area of these fields. As a result of our research efforts, we had more than 253 peer-reviewed articles published by faculty in 2023. During your two-year clinical training, the program allows some protected time to pursue scholarly activity/research projects under the guidance of a mentor

Mayo Clinic has a National Institutes of Health (NIH)-funded T32 training grant in endocrinology, diabetes, and metabolism. Areas of clinical and research expertise offered in the Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes, Metabolism, & Nutrition include:

  • Clinical nutrition. Emphasizes obesity management, including bariatric procedures, and enteral and parenteral nutrition in both outpatient and inpatient settings.
  • Inpatient endocrinology. Covers metabolic and endocrine management of inpatients, including the perioperative setting.
  • Thyroid. Deals with thyroid dysfunction and related complications (such as Graves' ophthalmopathy), diagnostic thyroid ultrasound and fine-needle aspiration of thyroid nodules, and management of low-risk thyroid cancer and non-surgical management of benign nodular thyroid disease.
  • Adrenal disease. Includes adrenal tumors and congenital or acquired disorders of hyper- or hypofunction, including primary hyperaldosteronism, pheochromocytoma, and Cushing syndrome.
  • Pituitary gonadal disease. Involves medical management of prolactinoma, acromegaly, Cushing disease, hypopituitarism, hypogonadism, and diabetes insipidus.
  • Endocrine neoplasia. References advanced thyroid cancer, adrenal cancers, neuroendocrine tumors, multiple endocrine neoplasia, and other syndromes in coordination with oncology and related specialties.
  • Bone and calcium. Includes osteoporosis, osteomalacia including bone histomorphometry, cancer-induced bone disease, primary hyperparathyroidism, hypoparathyroidism, and rare bone diseases.
  • Metabolic disorders. Covers diabetes mellitus, including technology and algorithms for insulin pumps, glucose sensor loops, lipid metabolism as it relates to cardiac disease, polycystic ovary syndrome, dyslipidemia, lipodystrophy, and hypoglycemic disorders.
  • Transplant. Involves whole-pancreas transplantation and post-transplant endocrinology.
  • Transgender medicine. Includes an endocrinology-led multidisciplinary clinic.

Basic science support for fellows in a NIH-training grant is provided in physiology, biochemistry and molecular biology, pharmacology, microbiology, genetics, immunology, cell biology, epidemiology, statistics, and other areas. The integration of basic and clinical research into practice is one of the division's strengths.

At Mayo Clinic, your research mentor closely supervises protocol development, the conduct of the study, data analysis, presentation, and final manuscript preparation. Mayo fellows present their work at national meetings and publish two or more first-author papers.

Learn more about our faculty and endocrine research programs in which clinical fellows may choose to conduct research.

Teaching opportunities

You have the opportunity to lecture and facilitate small group discussions in the Mayo Clinic Alix School of Medicine endocrine physiology block. You also routinely teach internal medicine residents rotating through our inpatient consulting service and outpatient endocrine clinics.

In addition to feedback after formal conference presentations, time is blocked for you to attend a workshop on how to give effective presentations. And in addition to an annual workshop on teaching presented by experienced medical educators and education scholars, mentorship is available if you are seeking to develop a career in medical education.

Evaluation

To ensure that you achieve your greatest potential, and to meet Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education requirements, your progression toward competence and beyond is assessed regularly during the Endocrinology Fellowship.

In addition to informal face-to-face feedback, you are evaluated by your supervising faculty member after completing each rotation. Evaluations include direct observation using a video-camera-equipped examination room in the clinic, chart review, objective structured clinical examination (OSCE), multisource evaluations, and an in-training examination.

You meet at least semiannually with the program director to review these evaluations. Endocrinology fellows typically progress to limited supervision in the third year based on these evaluations.

In addition, you regularly evaluate the faculty to confirm that your educational needs are being met.