The Johns Hopkins Geriatric Physical Therapy Residency Program offers educational and clinical experiences aimed at training patient-centered clinicians who deliver compassionate and exceptional care in outpatient geriatric physical therapy. Our robust curriculum teaches evidence-informed practice, sound clinical decision making and effective communication across disciplines. The program is committed to cultivating a clinical environment that strives for excellence, embraces diversity, encourages innovation and fosters creativity. Through these efforts, we aim to increase the number of highly skilled and competent geriatric physical therapists, preparing them to serve the community as clinical specialists, advocates, mentors, scholars and investigators in the field of geriatrics.
Program Details
ABPTRFE developing program (candidacy status)
Duration: 13 months
Over 1,500 hours of clinical practice
More than 150 hours of 1:1 clinical mentoring with board-certified clinicians
Program Benefits
Salary and access to full-time employee benefits
Earn credits toward a master's, doctorate or postdoctorate degree, including Master of Public Health, through enrollment in a three-credit course on the epidemiology of aging at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Outpatient rotation at The Johns Hopkins Hospital, acute care rotation at Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center, and exposure to home care through Johns Hopkins Care at Home and to skilled nursing facilities at Sibley Memorial Hospital's Renaissance Unit
Participation in the Johns Hopkins Orthopaedic Physical Therapy Continuing Education Series
Option of taking either Certified Exercise Expert for Aging Adults o r the Johns Hopkins University Clinical Vestibular Competency Course
Conference attendance
The mission of Johns Hopkins Medicine is to improve the health of the community and the world by setting the standard of excellence in medical education, research and clinical care.
Diverse and inclusive, Johns Hopkins Medicine:
Educates medical students, scientists, health care professionals and the public
Conducts biomedical research
Provides patient-centered medicine to prevent, diagnose and treat human illness.
The Johns Hopkins Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation has been helping patients recover function since 1992. Our twenty convenient locations form the Johns Hopkins Rehabilitation Network, which provides comprehensive rehabilitation services and continuum of care to patients throughout Maryland.
**This is a position with Johns Hopkins Hospital. This application is for the Fellowship position. Invited candidates will undergo an additional application process with Human Resources at which time salary will be finalized. Benefits are available. More information can be found at Johns Hopkins Benefits Enrollment ' Your benefits virtually (mybenefitsjhhs.com)
Qualifications
Qualified applicants:
1. Must be a graduate of an accredited physical therapy program,
2. Possess or be eligible to obtain a valid Maryland physical therapy license. This requires taking and passing the FSBPT licensure exam by July PRIOR to the program start date.
3. Be eligible to work in the US without visa sponsership.
Application Instructions
Admissions will occur on a rolling basis and we are accepting one resident, so do not delay!
To apply, please submit:
Current curriculum vitae
Graduate transcripts
2 letters of recommendation
A personal statement
$50 application fee
Personal Statement Instructions:
Please provide a 1-page personal statement in which you address the following questions:
How do you plan to use your residency/fellowship training at JHM to advance you career goals?
Reflect on a personal experience that shaped who you are today and demonstrates how your core values align with the values of Johns Hopkins Medicine and the Therapy Residency and Fellowship programs. In your response, highlight how this experience influenced your growth and development in relation to one or two of the following values: Excellence and Discovery, Leadership and Integrity, Diversity and Inclusion, Respect and Collegiality, Adaptability and Flexibility, Communication, Critical Thinking, Evidence-Based Practitioner, Developmental Mindset, and Interprofessional Communication.
Johns Hopkins University remains committed to its founding principle, that education for all students should be grounded in exploration and discovery. Hopkins students are challenged not just to learn but also to advance learning itself. Critical thinking, problem solving, creativity, and entrepreneurship are all encouraged and nourished in this unique educational environment. After more than 130 years, Johns Hopkins remains a world leader in both teaching and research. Faculty members and their research colleagues at the university's Applied Physics Laboratory have each year since 1979 won Johns Hopkins more federal research and development funding than any other university. The university has nine academic divisions and campuses throughout the Baltimore-Washington area. The Krieger School of Arts and Sciences, the Whiting School of Engineering, the School of Education and the Carey Business School are based at the Homewood campus in northern Baltimore. The schools of Medicine, Public Health, and Nursing share a campus in east Baltimore with The Johns Hopkins Hospital. The Peabody Institute, a leading professional school of music, is located on Mount Vernon Place in downtown Bal...timore. The Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies is located in Washington's Dupont Circle area.