HCA Florida Blake Hospital is expanding its Graduate Medical Education (GME) program with new specialty programs designed to help develop physicians completing their residency and fellowship training, attract top medical talent to the hospital and strengthen the physician pipeline for Manatee County and surrounding communities.
The hospital received initial accreditation from the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) for its clinical cardiac electrophysiology fellowship and pain medicine fellowship, marking an important expansion of HCA Florida Blake Hospital’s growing GME platform. The new programs will begin July 1, with the start of the new GME academic year. The hospital will train three physicians in these new specialties, and the overall GME program will grow from 95 to 104 residents and fellows. As part of their training, residents and fellows work alongside experienced physicians and care teams, helping support patient care while gaining hands-on experience in a hospital-based learning environment.
Clinical cardiac electrophysiology focuses on the diagnosis and treatment of heart rhythm disorders, while pain medicine focuses on evaluating and treating patients with acute, chronic and complex pain conditions. The addition of these programs expands opportunities for physicians to receive advanced specialty training in Bradenton while supporting the hospital’s broader efforts to recruit and retain talented providers to the area.
“Expanding our Graduate Medical Education program is an investment in the future of healthcare in our community,” said Steve Young, chief executive officer of HCA Florida Blake Hospital. “By offering more advanced training opportunities here in Bradenton, we are helping attract talented physicians to the region and creating pathways for them to build their careers here.”
In addition to the newly accredited programs, the following programs received continued accreditation this year by the ACGME including the internal medicine residency, transitional year residency, physical medicine and rehabilitation residency, infectious disease fellowship and cardiovascular disease fellowship.
The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education, commonly known as ACGME, is the national organization responsible for accrediting physician residency and fellowship programs in the United States. ACGME accreditation helps ensure programs meet national standards for educational quality, clinical experience, supervision, patient safety and physician development.
GME programs play an important role in addressing physician workforce needs. By training residents and fellows locally, HCA Florida Blake Hospital is introducing physicians to the community, supporting their professional development and helping create a stronger pipeline of future providers for the region.
“Physicians in our GME program play an important role in caring for patients every day,” said Meghane Malvoisin, director of the GME program at HCA Florida Blake Hospital and HCA Florida Sarasota Doctors Hospital. “When residents and fellows train at Blake, they become part of our care teams, part of our learning culture and part of our effort to grow the next generation of physicians right here in Manatee County.”