Department of Medicine
Fellowship Programs
In addition to patient services, several of our Divisions offer exceptional programs for Residents and Fellows within their designated areas of expertise.
Fellowship Programs
In addition to patient services, several of our Divisions offer exceptional programs for Residents and Fellows within their designated areas of expertise.
The David C. Lewis, MD Fellowship in Addiction Medicine at Rhode Island Hospital, is a one- or two-year fellowship for physicians who desire comprehensive training in addiction medicine.
The Critical Care Medicine Fellowship Program affiliated with Brown University, Rhode Island Hospital, and the Miriam Hospital offers a 1-2 year training program for applicants looking for robust critical care training.
Our fellowship offers exposure to a diverse range of pathologies. Our aim is to provide fellows with a rigorous and undiluted training experience.
We aspire to help our fellows experience and manage a wide range of diverse patients with endocrine disorders.
The goal of the program is to prepare board eligible internists for a career in clinical or academic gastroenterology.
The Brown Fellowship in Cardiovascular Disease is a clinically and academically rigorous program that prepares fellows to function as experts in the field of general clinical cardiology.
We aim to produce new clinical and academic leaders and inspire careers that share our vision to improve the quality of lives of older adults.
This fellowship provides advanced training in HIV and tuberculosis medicine through focused clinical sessions, didactics, and research opportunities.
Graduating fellows are well equipped to pursue scholarly academic careers and for the challenges of clinical practice in Hematology and Medical Oncology.
The Infectious Diseases Fellowship provides career and research mentoring to the next generation of infectious diseases physician-scientists, clinicians, and clinician-educators.
The goals of the program are for trainees to become competent in performing a variety of coronary artery interventional procedures including balloon angioplasty and stenting, atherectomy, intracoronary physiology and imaging, and mechanical circulatory support.
Fellows receive exposure to the full gamut of procedures including both native and transplant kidney biopsies, internal jugular and femoral dialysis catheters, and plasmapheresis.
Our fellowship draws on the many talents of specialists at the Division of Obstetric & Consultative Medicine and The Warren Alpert Medical School to provide fellows with a stimulating, two-year experience in obstetric medicine.
The goal of the Brown Hospice and Palliative Medicine Fellowship is to produce new leaders in the field who will provide and model excellent clinical care of seriously ill patients.
The purpose of the fellowship is to prepare board eligible or certified internists for a career in clinical and/or academic Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine.
The Brown Rheumatology fellowship program is designed for individuals interested in careers as clinical or academic-clinical rheumatologists.
The purpose of this program is to prepare fellows to care for patients with acquired or congenital cardiovascular pathologies that involve the major central cardiovascular structures outside of the acquired atherosclerotic coronary and peripheral vascular pathologies.
This program will provide comprehensive training, not only in the latest advanced interventional techniques, but, as importantly, in the non-invasive vascular laboratory, vascular clinic, and vascular consult services.