Plastic Surgery Residency Programs | DCl | MedStar Health

The MedStar Health—Georgetown University Hospital Residency Program in Plastic Surgery

A group of doctors and residents from the Georgetown University Hospital Plastic Surgery Residency Program stand together for a group photo.

MedStar Health - Georgetown University PartnershipMH-GU logoThe plastic surgery residency trains outstanding clinical surgeons for productive careers in both academia and clinical practice.

Our residents are trained in technical performance, ethics, and clinical judgment at the highest possible level.

They leave the program highly capable surgeons, refined in mind and character, ready to master every responsibility of patient care, scholarship, and leadership.

Why train here

The program is set up to admit residents at the PGY-1 level for six years of training. The first year, which includes 3 months total in plastic surgery, focuses on general surgery. The second year is all plastic surgery except for one month on burn surgery and one month on critical care. The remaining time is spent focusing on plastic surgery specifically with immersive training that prioritizes early and frequent operative experience. The program complement is 24 residents.

Each resident gets 3 months of plastic surgery as an intern, 10 months of plastic surgery as a PGY-2 and all plastic surgery thereafter.

We embrace a culture of selflessness, empathy, and compassion. We work, grow, and care for one another as teammates. Any surgical residency is rigorous and challenging — but our residents thrive, in a courteous, respectful, and enthusiastic training environment.

Our residents not only receive the finest possible training; they look forward to coming to work. That sets us apart from other highly respected programs.

Academic excellence

Residents benefit from early exposure to hands-on training and progressive responsibility for patient care in hospitals in the MedStar Health system, as well as affiliate hospitals throughout the D.C. region. The program offers unparalleled breadth and depth of training with many sites at world-recognized centers of excellence. All but eight months of the six-year program are dedicated plastic surgery rotations.
  • The limb rotation is on Dr. Christopher Attinger’s and Karen Evans’ world-class Limb Salvage Center, where third-year residents serve as chief of service
  • Formal hand surgery rotations are under the direction of Dr. James Higgins at the world-renowned Curtis National Hand Center at MedStar Union Memorial Hospital 
  • Residents gain breast surgery experience under Drs. David Song and Ken Fan at the Betty Lou Ourisman Breast Health Center at MedStar Georgetown University Hospital
  • The PGY-5 resident takes an elective month that can be arranged anywhere for a one-month deep dive. Past residents have trained in Korea, Taiwan, and major U.S. institutions
  • The PGY-6 receives a focus month in any area of interest where additional concentration is desired prior to graduation
Our program is unique in that we have only one fellow, dedicated to microsurgery. Since each operative day usually includes several microsurgery cases, the fellow does not detract from the resident experience. The absence of other fellows maximizes the residents’ experience in maxillofacial, hand, limb, aesthetic, and peripheral nerve cases.

Medstar Center for Gender Affirmation led by Dr. Gabriel Del Corral, a microsurgeon who specializes in all aspects of gender affirmation surgery. Dr. Del Corral operates in Baltimore at Franklin Square Hospital and in Washington, D.C., at Washington Hospital Center.

Maxillofacial surgery by Dr. Stephen Baker who specializes in reconstructive and aesthetic facial surgery including genioplasty, rhinoplasty, orthognathic surgery, facial asymmetry, facial trauma, facial reshaping and skeletal components of facial rejuvenation.

Research is led by Dr. Ken Fan. The Medstar Georgetown Department of Plastic Surgery is supported by 2-3 research fellows each year, a full-time biostatistician, and an economist allowing the residents to have ample support in their research endeavors as they progress through the program. This research support enables the residents’ projects to continue even when on rigorous rotations.

Curriculum

Electives

Dr Manas Nigam poses for a portrait in a hallway at MedStar Georgetown University Hospital

Schedule

Sample academic year block schedule:

How we evaluate candidates

A frequently asked question: what are you looking for in the plastic surgery residency applicant?

In a word, potential. The team completes a holistic evaluation of each applicant, but grades, board scores, and research record are all very important.

What qualities predict potential? The U.S. Army’s Core Values make a good example: duty, respect, selfless service, honor, integrity, and personal courage. John Wooden lists more in his Pyramid of Success: poise, confidence, team spirit, self-control, initiative, industriousness, friendship, cooperation, and enthusiasm. Others that increase your odds of success include empathy, judgment, resilience, and grit.

The program’s responsibility is to help each resident develop to full potential to become an outstanding surgeon. Good starting ingredients make the job easier; our residents are doctors with “the right stuff.”

Training locations

MedStar Washington Hospital Center

110 Irving St. NW
Washington, D.C., 20010

MedStar Georgetown University Hospital

3800 Reservoir Rd. NW
Washington, D.C., 20007

MedStar Union Memorial Hospital

201 E. University Pkwy
Baltimore, MD 21218

MedStar Franklin Square Medical Center

9000 Franklin Square Dr
Baltimore, MD 21237

MedStar Health Plastic Surgery at McLean

6862 Elm Street
Suite 800
McLean, VA 22101

Children’s National Medical Center

111 Michigan Avenue NW
Washington, D.C., 20010

Veteran’s Affairs Medical Center

810 Vermont Avenue, NW
Washington D.C., 20420

Walter Reed National Military Medical Center

8901 Wisconsin Avenue
Bethesda, MD 20889

Application information

Interested in applying? Get more details on how to apply to join our program.

Contact us

We welcome your questions about our program. For additional information, please contact:

Rebecca Falconer
Residency Program Coordinator