Albany Medical Internal Medicine Residency Program
We're a fully accredited residency program with a substantial referral area. Minecraft Divine Rpg 1.5 1.6.2. Patients range from inner-city underserved populations to the suburban middle/upper class. Our residents care for these patients under the direction of a dedicated, accessible, and personable faculty. There's a lot to learn from fascinating patients in a welcoming, yet challenging environment.
This is evident by our 99% ABIM board pass rate over the last 10 years. Our residents come from a wide range of backgrounds and they establish tight relationships with each other and our faculty and staff, as they become part of our family here in Syracuse. Whatever your goals are, we will help you achieve them. We invite you to learn more about our training, our facilities, our city, and more importantly, the lives of the people who make this program an outstanding place for resident training.
The Department of Medicine consists of a group of devoted clinician-educators, with a full-time faculty of over 50 and a private part-time faculty of over 75. The residents interact with our faculty daily both on wards and in clinics, and we strongly promote one-on-one education. Our faculty serve as leaders in their respective fields and are engaged in numerous scholarly activities. In addition, many of the core faculty have private practice experience which allows for the information passed to the housestaff to be both evidence-based and practical. Ramones Pleasant Dreams Expanded Remastered Rar on this page. Deerhoof Milk Man Zip there. Faculty on this page: • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Asim Amin, MD, PhD Specialty: Hematology-Oncology/Immunotherapy Medical School: King Edward Medical College, Lahore, Pakistan Residency: George Washington University Fellowship: Georgetown University, Lombardi Cancer Center Special Info: Dr. Asim Amin joined the faculty at Carolinas Medical Center in 2005.