Historically, the McMaster anesthesia residents form a tight-knit group and we share good times with one another, both within and outside of academic settings. We also demonstrate collegiality with residents from other Canadian programs, as evident by our residents’ annual involvement in the CAS conference and the McMaster-Western Resident Research Exchange Day. We are also actively involved in global health development, with two residents being selected every year for an international elective in Uganda.
Our training program has always maintained a strong reputation as we constantly strive for improvement and renovations. The regional anesthesia block has received great resident feedback and has been identified as a strength in our annual internal reviews. The simulation program is undergoing changes to its curriculum, with increased involvement and participation. Our residency program is always striving toward excellence, and the resident group is an integral part of this process.
The resident webpage is designed with the intention of providing a commonplace for sharing academic resources, program information, and links that are relevant to anesthesia residents at all levels of their training. Contents of the site will be continually updated with relevant articles, practice guidelines, and notices for upcoming academic events. Specific information pertaining to the residency program, such as schedules, academic core teaching programs, and archived presentations can be accessed at the password-protected link to Medportal. Contents of the Medportal site are meant to be available for McMaster anesthesia residents only.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ's)
Residents do call at each of the four clinical sites. At the JHCC, they cover daytime weekends only (8 am- 8 pm) and none of the weeknights. At all the other sites, (HGH, McMaster and SJH), residents do 24 hour call during the week and do “split call” on the weekends (8 am- 5 pm shift and a 5 pm-8 am shift). On average, residents do 3 weekend shifts a month (no more than 2 weekends) and 2 weekday shifts, totaling 5 calls overall for the month. Anesthesia residents are always off at 8 am post-call. At the end of PGY1, when you return to Anesthesia rotations in May, you will do several buddied calls prior to doing solo call. At the HGH, residents do not do solo call until they are halfway through the PGY2 year, again, after several buddy calls. The reason for this is the higher-level demands of the airway management of the trauma patient.
Most programs have eliminated 24 hour call entirely. However, most staff positions involve 24 hour call. At McMaster, we feel it is important that residency prepare you for practice. We also feel that there is more to wellness than the length of the call shift, such as the amount of call in total, the length of the non-call days and the amount of academic time that is given. It is interesting to note that in the US, 24 hour call has been “re-approved” again and a recent (March 17, 2017) NEJM article explores that topic. It’s not a simple issue and it impacts on patient care in some paradoxical ways.
We track all the residents’ call while on Anesthesia on a spreadsheet in real time, that is shared amongst all the residents and used to ensure equity in call distribution.
Call during off-service rotations is specific to the service. During several of the “medicine year” rotations, Anesthesia residents do Anesthesia “fly-in” call, thus maintaining a connection with their home program.
Anesthesia is not a “lifestyle specialty”. We work unsociable hours and sometimes our days are unpredictable in terms of when they will end. As a resident, you will be involved in lists of all durations. We have lists that end at 3:30 pm, 4:00, 4:30, 5:00 and 6:00 pm. The cardiac rooms are booked until 7 pm. You will be assigned to all types of lists during your residency and during the PGY4 year (subspecialty rotations), the frequency of long days is greater. Unless on call or on subspecialty, it would be unusual not to be finished by 5 pm and often quite a bit earlier.
At McMaster Anesthesia, the assigning of residents to lists is done by the “admin resident” at each site, who is usually a PGY4. The admin resident also constructs the call schedule. Part of the admin resident’s role is to be in dialogue with the other residents at the site to ensure that their learning needs are being met. PGY5’s have more input into their list selection as they are keen to round out their residency and ensure a balanced exposure to all types of patients and cases. We have a fair, transparent online process where residents can make their requests for vacation time or days off.
There are many other ways in which residents have control over their learning. Our academic curriculum is very interactive and is optimized through self-directed learning. Research opportunities are myriad such that almost any interest can be explored. There are many optional rotations to explore in the off-service years as well as while in Anesthesia, including the Uganda elective.
Finally, many of our residents explore alternative learning programs towards the end of their residencies, through the Critical Care Medicine Program or Chronic Pain residency program (both are two year programs which can overlap for one year with the PGY5 year of Anesthesia) or through the Clinical Investigator Program.
Absolutely! Residents are involved in teaching clerks throughout residency. Residents participate in the clerkship curriculum, where they teach didactic sessions and facilitate sessions with task trainers and our standardized simulation scenarios. On average, each resident would spend approximately 2 days per year teaching within the clerkship program. As well, the clerks spend one night “on call” and are attached to the anesthesia resident for that experience.
Some residents chose to participate in teaching “Clinical Skills” to Undergraduate medical students. Finally, the McMaster Medical School (Undergrad) has an active “Anesthesia Interest Group” which organizes weekend workshops with volunteer Anesthesia residents and faculty as facilitators.
Residents also have the opportunity to develop their presentation skills through their Journal Club presentations, Research Exchange Day presentation and mandatory presentations at academic half days and rounds. For example, PGY4 residents “teach” the PGY3 summer academic half-day curriculum along with a faculty facilitator.
Yes! Each PGY year has a resident representative on the resident advisory council, which sits on the Residency Program Committee. There are also many other committee opportunities through the postgrad office. Amongst our residents we have the PARO past-president and several PARO board members.
Yes, you will be assigned a faculty mentor when you arrive. You will have a mentor for the full five years of your program; during the early stages of residency, they will help you get oriented, and as you progress through the program they will be there to provide advice in areas such as exam preparation, electives, fellowships, and career decisions. We will also you assign you a more senior resident “buddy”. Many residents naturally find many other “informal mentors” as they move through the program. One thing to be aware of is that each resident also has an academic advisor (AA). The AA fulfills a different role than the mentor. The AA tracks your academic progress and ensures that you are on track regarding the achievement of your EPA’s, in particular.
I suppose ,”We’ve always done it this way” is not a satisfying answer? OK, well, we think there are several benefits to the way we have ordered our rotations. For one, once you finish that PGY3 medicine year, you are on Anesthesia rotations for the rest of your residency, so you can focus exclusively on your core material as you hit the home stretch of exam preparation. Also, as a PGY4, you encounter all your Anesthesia subspecialty rotations, so you have the equivalent “medicine” background experience in order to optimize your rotation. For example, when you do Cardiac Anesthesia, you have already done CV-ICU; When you do Thoracic Anesthesia, you have already done Respirology and gained experience in bronchoscopy; when you do High-Risk Peds, you have already done your NICU (or PICU) rotation) etc. etc. Finally, because we offer a FULL ACADEMIC DAY to our residents (which doesn’t apply when they are off-service), by keeping the off-service rotations bunched into one year, it allows us to plan the academic time more coherently for each PGY cohort. (If some of your group was getting a full day, and some a half day, it would be difficult to avoid having some residents miss part of the day). Other programs who only offer an academic half-day throughout the entire residency (or until the end of PGY4) do not have these logistical considerations of where to place the off-service rotations.
Like all aspects of our program, this issue is on the table for discussion and we are constantly seeking input from our residents. Recently, when I asked the PGY4’s if we should look at deconstructing the “medicine year” to intersperse the rotations rather than having them occur as a one-year block, they were unanimous in saying that the block of rotations is preferable. As it stands, most residents have one or two Anesthesia rotations during their PGY3 year and that, as well as the buddy call, helps them stay in touch with their home base.
Great question! Since candidates always ask this question, we started to track it. The left column shows what each resident did for their first year after graduating and the right hand column shows their permanent staff position. As you can see, McMaster Grads have no difficulty securing excellent fellowship positions leading to academic positions, or jobs in the community.
2015 Grads
Right after Graduation: | Current Position: |
direct to Cambridge staff position | Cambridge staff |
clinical scholar HHS | HHS staff |
clinical scholar HHS | HHS staff |
Fellowship (regional) Ottawa | Sudbury staff |
ICU fellowship (Hamilton) | HHS staff |
fellowship OB Harvard | HHS staff |
Pain fellowship Hamilton | HHS staff |
2016 Grads
Cambridge staff |
Regional Fellowship Toronto |
Pain Fellowship Toronto |
OB Fellowship Ottawa- joined HHS staff 2017 |
locums |
Clinical Scholar HHS- joined HHS staff in 2017 |
2017 grads
Cardiac Fellowship Hamilton | ||
Cardiac Fellowship Toronto | ||
Thoracic Fellowship Toronto | ||
OB Fellowship Dalhousie | ||
Regional Fellowship Australia | ||
locums
|
2018 Grads
locums |
Clinical scholar HHS |
staff position – Humber River Hospital |
locums |
Neuroanesthesia – Northwestern (Chicago) |
Pediatrics Fellowship – Toronto Sick Kids |
Critical Care Fellowship McMaster |
SJH locum |
OB fellowship Ottawa |
Fellowships completed prior to residency |
2019 Grads
Fellowship – Out of Country |
Fellowship – Mount Sinai |
Perioperative Fellowship – California |
Clinical Scholar – McMaster |
Thoracic Fellowship – Toronto |
2020 grads
Critical Care fellowship x 2: McMaster. 1 staff as of July 2021 |
Cardiac Anesthesia fellowship: McMaster, Staff as of August 2021 |
Neuroanesthesia fellowship: Western (London), staff as of August 2021 |
Clinical Scholar: St Joseph’s Hospital (Hamilton) |
Regional Anesthesia fellowship: Vancouver, staff as of August 021 |
Regional Anesthesia fellowship: Toronto |
Locum: St Catherine’s |
Chronic Pain fellowship: California (USA) |
2021 Grads
Fellowship – London |
Regional/ OB fellowship : Toronto |
Palliative Care Fellowship: McMaster |
Clinical Scholar: McMaster x 2 |
Cardiac Fellowship: McMaster |
Staff Position: Oakville |
We have residents from British Columbia and Nova Scotia and many provinces in between. Our residents are a tight-knit, social group who are very supportive of each other. See the “program highlights” section for some of the structured social elements. In addition, many residents chose to collaborate on research projects. Residents get to know each other well through their academic half day program, which brings them together each week in small groups. As well, residents have three retreats per year, scheduled during academic days.
PGY1 residents are assigned a “resident buddy” to act as an informal mentor.
You will also get to know our faculty, many of whom host social events or have the residents over to help with exam prep, to celebrate successes, or just to socialize.
We have residents who commute from as far as Toronto or Woodstock, but most live in and around Hamilton. The hospitals in Hamilton are situated in the four corners of the city, each a 10-15 minute drive from any other. Many residents chose to live near McMaster, in either Westdale or West Hamilton. Another popular area would be near St. Joe’s, in the area of Bay, Caroline, Bold, and Herkimer streets. A number of residents live in the area around Locke Street South. From here, you’re just steps to great cafés and restaurants, the grocery store, gyms and parks (http://lockestreetshops.com). It’s a 10 minute walk to St. Joe’s, and just under 10 minute drive to each of the other 3 hospitals. Nearby communities of Dundas and Ancaster are popular with families as is Westdale.
We have several faculty who live in or around Toronto. Toronto is a great city, and one if its best attributes is that it’s not too far a drive to Hamilton. However, most would find that too far of a commute for the lifestyle of a resident.
Every city will have those sketchy areas and Hamilton is no different. The Hamilton General is in close proximity to those less desirable areas. Fortunately, residents are almost always coming and going during daylight hours. Most of the city is quite lovely.
Hamilton is currently undergoing a boom: the city has a rapidly growing economy, the downtown core is being revitalized with an influx of new businesses and condos, a new GO station with all day service to Toronto, and dedicated bike lanes (along with a new bike share program) are being built throughout the city. There is a burgeoning restaurant, bar and night life scene happening at the moment.
There is no shortage of activities in Hamilton. If you like the outdoors, you have direct access to the Bruce trail and hundreds of kilometres of hiking and cycling trails. There is sailing and rowing on the lake and rock climbing nearby. Hamilton also has a vibrant arts and music scene, with lots of festivals throughout the summer. There is a wonderful year-round Farmer’s market in the downtown mall (Jackson Square) as well as outdoor Farmer’s markets in Dundas and Ancaster seasonally.
One of our (now) PGY2’s, who moved to Hamilton from a nearby, larger city says it best: “Life in Hamilton and surrounding area is just awesome and if I have to choose one thing I personally like SO much is that traffic has never been an issue. I feel thankful that I don’t need to trade struggling with traffic for a strong residency training. Where else can you get that?”
HGH, McMaster and JHCC all have Fitness Centres on site as part of their “Shine” Wellness Centres (you can check it out online). St. Joe’s has a wellness centre that offers spin and yoga classes.
No, there is not. Sorry.