Clinical Informatics Fellowship

About the Fellowship:

UIC is excited to be one of the first ACGME-accredited Clinical Informatics (CI) fellowship programs. Clinical Informatics is a two-year training program that is open to graduates of any ACGME, RCPSC or CFPC-accredited residency programs across all fields of medicine.

Clinical Informatics is defined in the ACGME program requirements as “the subspecialty of all medical specialties that transforms health care by analyzing, designing, implementing, and evaluating information and communication systems to improve patient care, enhance access to care, advance individual and population health outcomes, and strengthen the clinician-patient relationship.” It is a relatively new subspecialty, with the first board certification examinations offered in 2013 and the initial ACGME program requirements approved in 2014.

Among the many subspecialties that have emerged within medicine, Clinical Informatics is unique. Informatics, although it has a distinct set of knowledge and skills, is an essential part of the daily practice of every specialty of medicine. As a result, the CI fellowship program at UIC has a significant impact on patient care in every department, medical education at the undergraduate and graduate levels, and translational medical research being conducted in the College of Medicine and other colleges throughout the University of Illinois.

Clinical Informatics is an extremely broad field, covering many different potential areas of practice and study. The fellowship program is designed to provide the fellow with a foundation across the breadth of CI, as well as the opportunity to focus on several areas of specific interest to the fellow in which they will obtain a deeper understanding.

Educational Program:
The education program for the UIC Clinical Informatics fellowship program includes these main educational components:

  1. Operational rotations: The fellows collaborate with faculty, healthcare providers, information services (IS) teams, and leadership committees on active short and long-term projects throughout the health system.  Fellows will work on projects that are broad-based across the healthcare system as well as projects within the fellow’s specific areas of medical practice and/or interest. Rotations are four-months in duration, and can be tailored to fit a fellow’s particular career focus.
  2. Research rotations: The fellows will undertake informatics research in one or more areas of interest under the mentorship of our faculty.  It is expected that this research will be presented at national meetings and/or submitted for publication in peer-reviewed journals. The fellows are also encouraged to approach their operational projects with an academic focus, with intent to contribute to the literature.
  3. Core curriculum/Active learning course: The core curriculum has been created in conjunction with the Department of Biomedical and Health Information Sciences (BHIS) at UIC.  Fellows will participate in a required (3) and elective (2) series of asynchronous online courses, live discussion groups and active learning sessions given over a two-year cycle. The full BHIS course catalog is available to the CI fellows. Through courses offered by BHIS, fellows will interact with graduate students pursuing certificate, masters and doctoral degrees in health informatics. Despite the strength of our graduate curriculum in informatics, we understand there are still growing areas that fellows desire to better understand. In order to meet this need, CI fellows are provided with Coursera subscription and encouraged to take courses for credit. Our fellows have commonly taken courses on artificial intelligence, Python programming, and data visualization using Tableau.
  4. National meetings: Attending national meetings helps fellows to understand the scope, scale and current thoughts in Clinical Informatics, and provides them the opportunity to network with informatics colleagues.  Fellows are expected to attend at least one national informatics meeting in each year of their fellowship, and are encouraged to present their work at these conferences. Fellows are provided $2000/year for travel related to informatics events, and are eligible for an additional $3000/year if presenting at an informatics conference or with approval. Fellows have leveraged these generous funds to further their interests and present their work at national conferences. We also encourage our fellows to travel to Epic or Cerner for their CI fellowship oriented training/networking events.
  5. Innovation/Entrepreneurship: Many of our fellows indicate a strong interest in entrepreneurship and/or innovation. Our program offers a growing portfolio of internal and external programs that allow fellows to develop this interest. Opportunities includes rotations/workshops at MATTER and faculty-led research projects under Discovery Partners Institute (DPI). The program is also open (and encourages) partnering with other entities that would align with the fellow’s career goals.

Practicing Medicine During the Fellowship:

The ACGME requires fellows to maintain their primary certification while training in Clinical Informatics. After graduation from the program, most fellows will be practicing medicine in addition to their informatics activities. As such, our fellows are expected to practice medicine within the fellow’s area of medical specialty throughout the fellowship. The fellow’s clinical activity will be coordinated between the CI program and the clinical department. On average, our fellows practice about 45/hours per month over the 2 year fellowship. This allows the fellows to more fully understand the clinical workflows and the operational impact of their informatics projects.

Core Faculty:

Shane Borkowsky, MD (Internal Medicine, Associate CHIO)
Andy Boyd, MD (Biomedical Health Information Sciences, Associate CHIO; Associate Vice-Chancellor Data & Computing)
Dave Chestek, DO (Emergency Medicine, CMIO; Director of Clinical Informatics of ED & Community Care)
William Galanter, MD, PhD (Associate Program Director, Internal Medicine)
Bhrandon Harris, MD (Family Medicine, Director of Primary Care Clinical Informatics)
Sagar Harwani, MD (Internal Medicine, Director Clinical Informatics – Medicine; Associate CMO)
Karl Kochendorfer, MD (Family Medicine; Chief Health Information Officer)
​Tushar Patel, MD (Pathology, Program Director; Director of Pathology Informatics)
Manmeet Singh, DO (Pathology, Assistant Professor of Clinical Pathology)

Current fellows:

Second-Year
Aaron Chaise, MD (Family Medicine)

First-Year
Steven Nevers, MD (Family Medicine)
Awais Farooq, MD (Internal Medicine)
Luke Lauridsen, MD (Pathology)


Alumni:

2017:
John Manning, DO (Emergency Medicine, Director of Clinical Informatics, Carolinas Medical Center)

2018:
Roger Boodoo, MD (Radiology, Chief, Director’s Innovation Group, Defense Health Agency)
Dave Chestek, DO (Emergency Medicine, CMIO, UI Health/UIC)
Bhrandon Harris, MD (Family Medicine, Director of Primary Care Informatics, UI Health/UIC)
Zach Sonnier, DO (Internal Medicine, CMIO, Federal Electron Health Record Modernization Office (FEHRM))

2019:
Al Alsadi, MD (Pathology, Director of Pathology Informatics, U. of Wisconsin Madison).
Monique Diaz, MD (PM&R, CMIO, Dignity Health)

2020:
Kamel Azhar, MD (Family Medicine, Family Physician & Clinical Informatician, Eisenhower Health)
John Zulueta, MD (Psychiatry, Director of Psychiatry Clinics, UI Health/UIC)

2021:
Sagar Harwani, MD (Internal Medicine, Assistant Professor of Medicine, Associate CMO, Director of Clinical Informatics, Physician Advisor; UI Health/UIC)
Jai Nebhrajani, MD (Family Medicine, Assistant Professor of Family Medicine, Physician Advisor; UI Health/UIC)

2022:
Sean Huang, MD (Internal Medicine/Geriatrics, Assistant Professor of Biomedical Informatics, Vanderbilt University)
Jorge Rodriguez-Fernandez (Neurology, Associate CMIO, UTMB Galveston).

2023:
Kunal Patel, MD (Emergency Medicine, Director of Clinical Informatics for EM, Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine, UI Health/UIC)
Anwar Jebran, MD (Internal Medicine, Physician Informaticist, Oak Street Health; Adjunct Professor, UI Health/UIC)

Requirements:

Applicants must have completed an ACGME-accredited residency program and are board-certified or board-eligible.  Applicants should be eligible for a permanent Illinois medical license. H1B visa sponsorship is not currently offered.

GME Benefits:

–  UIC offers a generous vacation and sick leave policy. Fellows are allowed 20working days of vacation per year, and 24 calendar days of sick leave per year. Fellows are also allowed the same number of holidays available to other essential clinical staff.
–  Resident stipend
  Resident Agreement

Please visit the UIC Graduate Medical Education Office for more complete information on stipends and benefits, including the GME Policy Manual.

UIC/UIH Campus:

– University of Illinois at Chicago, GME Recruitment Video
– Campus Map

Application:

We have filled our positions for 2024-2026, and will NOT be participating in the upcoming recruitment cycle (7/2023-12/2023).

UIC Clinical Informatics Fellowship Program Information: 

Program Name: University of Illinois College of Medicine Program
Specialty: Clinical Informatics (Pathology)
ACGME ID: 3021638001

For any questions, please contact:

Ms. Zelda Canete
Program Coordinator
University of Illinois Hospital & Health Sciences System
Department of Pathology (MC 847)
840 S. Wood Street, CSN 130
Chicago, Illinois 60612
PH: 312-355-0482
Twitter: https://twitter.com/UICCIFellowship