Fellowship Locations
Uniquely positioned training facilities provide a collaborative exchange for fellows in Salt Lake city. These facilities include the University of Utah Medical Center, Primary Children's Medical Center, Shriner's Hospital for Children, and the Veteran Affairs Medical Center. This constellation of hospitals provides a well-balanced exposure to both community and tertiary orthopaedic surgery. The following facilities are all located within a three-mile radius.
Fellowships and Locations
- University Orthopaedic Center - All Fellowships
- University of Utah Medical Center - All Fellowships
- Huntsman Cancer Institute - Sarcoma Fellowship
- Primary Children's Medical Center - Hand, Pediatric, Sarcoma, and Spine Fellowships
- Shriners Hospital for Children – Salt Lake City - Hand, Pediatric, and Spine Fellowships
- Veterans Affairs Medical Center - Hand, Spine, and Total Joint Fellowships
Overview of Locations
University Orthopaedic Center
The University Orthopaedic Center is the only full-service specialty center of its kind in the Intermountain West. The center specializes in joint reconstruction, sports medicine, pediatric orthopaedics, spinal disorders, hand, foot and ankle, trauma, musculoskeletal oncology, shoulder and elbow as well as physical therapy. Our state-of-the-art Orthopaedic Center allows us to take a collaborative approach in treating the total patient in a multidisciplinary environment. Our physicians and researchers are creating the future of orthopaedic care today.
University of Utah Medical Center
The University of Utah Medical Center is a major tertiary referral center for complex and sometimes unusual medical cases from throughout the Intermountain West. It serves as a regional Level-1 trauma center and has an active emergency Department. This 425-bed tertiary and primary care center is situated at the foot of the Wasatch Mountains at the eastern edge of Salt Lake City. The medical center also maintains a large primary care base supplied from the Division of General Internal Medicine and the eight satellite clinics of the University of Utah Health Network located along the 50-mile Wasatch Front. The University of Utah Medical Center is internationally recognized for its critical care units.
Huntsman Cancer Institute
Huntsman Cancer Institute (HCI) is a hospital-based patientcare cneter in assiciation with the University of Utah Health Sciences Center. It is located on 2000 Circle of Hope (above the University of Utah Medical Center). The Sarcoma Service at HCI specializes in, researches, and treats sarcomas affecting people of all ages.
Primary Children's Medical Center
Primary Children's Medical Center (PCMC) is a large children's hospital adjacent to the University of Utah Medical Center. It is a tertiary referral center for the Intermountain West. There is a busy Emergency Department which serves as a regional Level-1 trauma center for children.
Shriners Hospital For Children - Salt Lake City
The Shriners Hospital For Children is a 40-bed pediatric orthopaedic hospital providing comprehensive orthopaedic care to children with routine and complex orthopaedic problems, utilizing the latest treatments and technology available in pediatric orthopaedics. The hospital is one of 22 Shriners Hospitals throughout North America. Over the past 20 years, more than 8,000 physicians have received residency education or post-graduate fellowship training in the orthopaedic and burn hospitals. But maintaining a strong link with the University of Utah Medical Center, the Shriners Hospital fosters an academic environment committed to providing high quality orthopaedic care to all patients. more...
V.A. Medical Center
The Veteran's Affairs Medical Center is a regional referral center for veterans. Fellows are exposed to a wide variety of adult reconstructive problems, hand and spinal disorders. There is a busy outpatient clinic and a fly-in outreach clinic in Helena, Montana. The V.A. Medical Center is physically located adjacent to the University Orthopaedic Center and the University Medical Center.
