Internal Medicine Residency Program

Lankenau Medical Center group photo

About the internal medicine residency program

The Internal Medicine residency program at Lankenau Medical Center began over 70 years ago. We are a university-level academic experience in a warm, supportive and personalized environment.

Our goal is to train internists who will not only go on to pass their ABIM examination, but dedicate their lives and careers to becoming lifelong learners of internal medicine. We work closely with individual residents to help them develop and achieve their professional goals.

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The Lankenau Medical Center experience

Internal medicine residency tour

Leadership, residents and graduates

Learn more about our leadership and faculty, residents and graduates.

Inpatient curriculum

Lankenau Medical Center offers two resident options in internal medicine: a preliminary internal medicine program (one-year internship) and a categorical internal medicine residency (three-year residency).

Our program has a focus on creating a family-type culture of mutual support and respect between trainees, faculty and program leadership. We have an additional focus on resident wellness and have our own residency Wellness Coach available for our trainees. We additionally see our program as succeeding through the creation of a personalized approach to each resident’s success and well-being.

Preliminary internal medicine residency program

Our preliminary program is designed for physicians who require one year of internal medicine training prior to going into a destination residency such as neurology, dermatology, radiation oncology, radiology/interventional radiology, physical medicine and rehabilitation, or anesthesiology. Over the course of a year, preliminary interns have exposure to a wide variety of disease processes in the acute patient care setting while preserving robust opportunities for learning elective specialties. We feel the preliminary year provides an invaluable background for any trainee entering a specialty residency.

Preliminary intern:

  • 3-3.5 blocks of inpatient medicine
  • 2 blocks of ICU
  • 1 block of night float (0.5 blocks twice yearly)
  • 0.5 block admitting team
  • 4.5-5 blocks of elective time

* Blocks are two to four weeks in duration

Categorical internal medicine residency program

Our categorical program is designed for physicians who are interested in a career in internal medicine or internal medicine sub-specialties such as endocrinology, gastroenterology, cardiology, hematology/oncology, rheumatology, infectious diseases, nephrology, pulmonary/critical care and geriatrics.

We believe that our categorical internal medicine residency program provides a diverse clinical experience in conjunction with excellent didactic teaching that prepares our residents for satisfying, lifelong careers in medicine.

Categorical intern:

  • 3-3.5 blocks of inpatient medicine
  • 2 blocks ICU
  • 6 two-week Y ambulatory blocks
  • 1 block of night float (0.5 blocks twice yearly)
  • 0.5 block admitting team
  • 0.5 block of emergency medicine

Categorical R2:

  • 3-3.5 blocks of inpatient medicine
  • 1 block ICU
  • 1 block admitting team (0.5 blocks twice yearly)
  • 6 two-week Y ambulatory blocks
  • 1.75 blocks of night float

Categorical R3:

  • 3 - 3.5 blocks of inpatient medicine
  • 6 two-week Y ambulatory blocks
  • 2 blocks ICU
  • 0.5 block admitting shift

* Blocks are two to four weeks in duration

Benjamin Larson, MD

Ambulatory experience

Lankenau Medical Associates (LMA) is the continuity practice for our internal medicine residency. It is a resident and faculty co-practice centrally located in Lankenau Medical Center, which serves a medically complex and diverse mix of patients, predominantly from West Philadelphia and surrounding suburbs. Each categorical resident builds a panel of primary care patients over a three-year period.

We ensure the quality of our residents' outpatient experience by maintaining a high functioning primary care practice. Our team includes a full-time doctoral level psychologist, a dedicated social worker, nurse case managers and even a community garden at Lankenau Medical Center that grows produce for our patients.

Our program utilizes an "X+Y" scheduling model, which gives categorical residents uninterrupted time to focus on outpatient medicine during their two-week ambulatory blocks. Since transitioning to X+Y in 2021, we have significantly improved continuity between patients and their resident PCP. Ambulatory residents are excused from clinical duties on Friday mornings for dedicated ambulatory education, which includes a mixture of didactic lectures, point-of-care ultrasound practice and case-based discussions.

The ambulatory experience also includes dedicated subspeciality training. In the PGY-1 year, this takes the form of survey rotations in office-based dermatology, gynecology, neurology, geriatrics, nutrition, pain medicine, addiction psychiatry, sports medicine and psychology.

In the PGY-2 and PGY-3 years, residents choose longitudinal ambulatory experiences among the core internal medicine subspecialties. These experiences allow fellowship-bound trainees to build relationships with subspecialists and experience office-based care in their future specialties. Upper year residents also have dedicated time for quality improvement projects, panel management and research projects during their ambulatory weeks.

Finally, we build in "personal time" during ambulatory weeks, so our residents can keep up with essential life tasks like dentist appointments!

– Benjamin Larson, MD

View SAMPLE Y week schedules

Applying to our program

Our residency program will only accept applications through the Electronic Residency Application System (ERAS) program offered by the AAMC. While we preferentially review applications from applicants that have signaled our program, we do still consider applications from applicants that do not signal us. We do not use signaling as part of our ranking process for applicants that have interviewed with our program. Interview invitations are sent on a rolling fashion from October to mid-November. Additional interview invitations from our waitlist may be sent through January if there are cancellations or additional spaces.

United States medical graduate applicant requirements

  • Dean’s letter
  • Three letters of recommendation
  • Medical school transcript
  • Personal statement
  • Curriculum Vitae in ERAS format
  • USMLE/COMLEX step 1 and 2 scores
  • For osteopathic medical graduate applicants, we welcome applicants who may submit COMLEX or USMLE (or both)

International medical graduate applicant requirements

  • ECFMG certificate
  • USMLE step 1 and 2 scores of 220 or higher with passing status on first attempt
  • Graduation from medical school in the last five years
  • Recent clinical experience (can be in your home country)
  • Dean’s letter
  • Three letters of recommendation
  • Medical school transcript
  • Personal statement
  • Curriculum Vitae in ERAS format
  • We sponsor J1 and H1B visas

Contact

Donna Heyduk, C-TAGME
Manager, Internal Medicine Residency Program
heydukd@mlhs.org