About us

Family Medicine About Us photo

The Highlights of Our Sioux City Residency

We are an unopposed family medicine program in northwest Iowa, providing a broad spectrum of training opportunities. As the only residency program in Sioux City, we are offered unparalleled exposure to specialty physicians and patients. Here, you can tailor your education and training to fit your practice goals. Our program consists of three years of postgraduate study for as many as six residents per residency year. Our program is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) and affiliated with University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine.

Sioux City resident with infant

Clinic Size

Our clinic is the one of the largest private practices in Sioux City. We follow all clinic patients through their hospitalizations, including ICU and PICU.

Maternal Health Clinic

We provide antenatal care to low-income and high-risk populations, providing us the opportunity to see a diverse range of patients and cases while serving the community.

Macy and Winnebago Reservation Clinics

We also provide antenatal care to the Native American populations on the Macy and Winnebago Reservation during our obstetrics months.

College Physicals

We provide annual sports physicals to many of the college athletes at Morningside College.

Monthly Afternoon Didactics

One afternoon a month, clinic and hospital duties are blocked for residents to have a full afternoon of lectures, simulation models, and quizzes, which provide a varied and interactive approach to learning.

Moonlighting

Moonlighting opportunities are available after you have received your permanent license.

Noon Conferences

Presentations are given by community physicians, fellow residents, staff, or visiting faculty over the noon hour. Lunch is provided.

Elective High Risk OB Elective

Curriculum

Family Medicine curriculum photo

Year One

  • Adult Medicine: 4 months
  • Inpatient Pediatrics: 2 months
  • Care of the Surgical Patient: 1 month
  • Community Medicine: 1/2 month
  • Emergency Care: 1 month
  • Human Behavior and Mental Health: 1 month
  • Maternity Care: 2 months
  • Radiology: 1/2 month

Year Two

  • Adult Medicine: 1.5 months
  • (Inpatient) Pediatrics: 1 month
  • (Outpatient) Pediatrics: 1 month
  • Critical Care/Pulmonology: 1 month
  • Family Medicine Night Float: 1 month (taken as 2 half-months)
  • Maternity Care: 1 month
  • Neurology: 1/2 month
  • Emergency Care: 1 month

Year Three

  • Adult Medicine: 1 month
  • (Outpatient) Pediatrics: 1 month
  • Family Medicine Night Float: 1 month (taken as 2 half-months)
  • Maternity Care: 1 month
  • Urgent Care: 1/2 month

Additional Requirements

For 2nd or 3rd year

  • Cardiology
  • Gynecological Care
  • Orthopaedics
  • Otolaryngology
  • Sports Medicine
  • Management of Health Systems
  • Care of the Skin and Associated Organs

Elective Rotations

  • Allergy/Immunology
  • Anesthesiology
  • NICU
  • Endocrinology
  • Hematology/Oncology
  • Hospice/Palliative Care
  • Infectious Disease
  • International Medicine
  • Maternity Care
  • Occupational Medicine
  • Parental Elective
  • Pathology
  • Pharmacotherapy
  • Pulmonology
  • Rural Family Medicine
  • Sports Medicine

Medical Student Rotations

Learn With Us 

Get a feel for our community and our practice by completing a four-week clinical rotation here in Sioux City. Choose from five different rotations, open to students in good standing currently attending an accredited medical school (MD/DO).    

Medical Student Rotation Requirements

These four-week rotations are open to medical students in open to students in good standing currently attending an accredited medical school (MD/DO). Students must demonstrate coverage for malpractice/liability from their medical institution. Students must show evidence of completion of a program on universal precautions ensuring the appropriate handling of blood, tissues, and body fluids during the past year. Students must also provide documentation of tuberculin and hepatitis B testing. Students are responsible for obtaining authorization of credit from their medical institution for the rotation.

For more information, questions, or to set up a rotation, please contact our Assistant Residency Coordinator.

 

Elly Johnson

Elly Johnson
Administrative Services Coordinator-Residency
Email: elly-johnson@uiowa.edu
Phone: 1-712-294-5024

Family Medicine Sub-Internship

The goal of the family medicine sub-internship is to provide a broad-based experience for fourth-year students interested in a career in family medicine. The sub-internship provides a wide variety of patients and cases to expose you to all aspects of family medicine.

You will spend most mornings at UnityPoint–St. Luke's or Mercy One Siouxland Medical Center, meeting with the in-house resident before rounds. You will round on your assigned patients daily and write notes and orders. Following work rounds, we have formal rounds with one of our faculty. After rounds, you will follow up on labs and studies for patients. You have the opportunity to work up patients in the ER, assist with deliveries, and complete circumcisions, depending on your interests. You will also attend morning reports with the residents between working rounds and formal rounds and may be asked to present on a topic during your sub-internship.

We have daily noon conferences at either our clinic, Mercy One Siouxland Medical Center, or UnityPoint–St. Luke's. Lunch is provided. Presenters vary and are composed of residents, faculty, and visiting physicians from the community or the University of Iowa. One afternoon each month is dedicated to didactics, often accompanied by skills labs.

The afternoon schedule is somewhat more variable than the morning schedule. You will spend various afternoons at the Family Medicine Center (residency clinic), working at the Maternal Health Clinic, and in the hospital doing admissions and patient follow-up. You will travel with a faculty member and resident to a local Native American Reservation for prenatal clinic on one Thursday afternoon during the rotation. You will have Friday afternoons off duty.

You will be on a family medicine night float shift for one week during the rotation in order to gain additional experience. During this week, you will work closely with the night float resident who covers adult medicine, pediatrics, and obstetrics. Housing may be available with advance notification.

Emergency Medicine Rotation

Students in the emergency medicine rotation will work at Mercy One Siouxland Medical Center, a Level II trauma center, and UnityPoint–St. Luke's, a Level III trauma center. You will arrange shifts with your preceptor based on the particular requirements of your medical school. While not required, students are encouraged to attend noon conferences with the residents. This four-week rotation is open to fourth-year medical students, with a limit of one student during each four-week rotation. Housing may be available with advance notification.

Family Medicine Rotation

This rotation is open to third-year medical students and emphasizes clinical decision-making skills in an outpatient family medicine setting. You will work with residency faculty and residents or community-based family medicine physicians. You are encouraged to attend a noon conference with the residents each day as well as the monthly afternoon didactic session. There is a limit of one student during each rotation. Housing may be available with advance notification.

The Medical Education Community Orientation (MECO) Program


The MECO Program is sponsored by the University of Iowa Department of Family Medicine in cooperation with the UI Carver College of Medicine. The project was developed to provide medical students with an early exposure to various health care delivery systems, helping them with important career decisions. It also provides the participating hospitals and practicing physicians an opportunity to become directly involved with medical students early in their training. The project is designed to broaden the base of medical education through a greater utilization of existing facilities and teaching personnel.

The goals and objectives of the MECO Progam are to introduce medical students to the scope of health care in the hospital component of a health care delivery system. The MECO Program should also orient the student to the community and the way in which the health care delivery system contributes to its structure and function. Housing may be available with advance notification.

For more information, questions, or to set up a rotation, please contact our Elly Johnson, assistant residency coordinator. 

Frequently Asked Questions

Family Medicine FAQ photo

Do applicants use the Electronic Residency Application Service (ERAS) to apply for your program?

Yes

How many letters of recommendation must applicants submit when applying to the program?

Three letters of recommendation are required.

Does this program offer additional training or educational experiences that extend the length of training beyond the accredited length?

No

Does the program require USMLE Step 1 and Step 2 scores for applicant interview consideration?

Yes

Does the program require COMLEX Level 1 and Level 2 scores for applicant interview consideration for DO applicants?

Yes

Do applicants need to pass either the USMLE Step 2 CS exam or the COMLEX Level 2 PE exam on the first try?

Yes

Does the program accept or sponsor ECFMG (Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates) applicants?

Rarely and only with a local connection.

Do you have a program application deadline? If yes, what is the cutoff date?

January 15th.

Do you have a time-since-graduation cutoff? If yes, how many years?

Yes, three years

Do you sponsor the H1 visa?

No

Benefits, Stipends, and Contracts

Benefits offered by University of Iowa Health Care are competitive with other top residency training programs in the country. Benefits include:

Stipends are also comparable to other top training programs in the country and in keeping with the cost of living in Iowa.

Contracts are issued to house staff each year until training concludes. Promotion at the end of each year is based on demonstrated clinical competence and professional growth. House staff members who do not meet standards for promotion to the next level of training may require remedial action, as deemed appropriate by the residency program director.

Where We Practice

Family Medicine Center

The Family Medicine Center is the model office used for the program. The center closely simulates private practice by providing an ambulatory setting for residents to gain broad experience as primary care physicians to an approved panel of patients. It is conveniently located within five minutes driving time of the two hospitals in Sioux City: Mercy One Siouxland Medical Center and UnityPoint–St. Luke's. 

Exterior image of the Sioux City clinical location

Our facility is a model of dedicated education areas as well as efficient clinical space. The two-story building, totaling approximately 32,000 square feet, allows us to continue our tradition of excellence in current programs and introduce new initiatives in medical education. 

Level One houses all of the patient care areas. Two exam pods, with 12 exam rooms each, balance the floor plan. Also included are faculty staffing rooms, private dictation rooms, laboratory, X-ray, procedure rooms, nursing areas, a patient education room, medical records room, and a spacious lobby. 

Level Two offers space devoted almost entirely to education. This includes a large conference room with multimedia capabilities, multiple smaller conference rooms, a library, a resting room, office cubicles for residents, a resident lounge area, and faculty physician offices. 

UnityPoint Health 

St. Luke's Regional Medical Center 

UnityPoint Health–St. Luke's is a patient- and family-centered hospital that delivers compassionate care to families in the tri-state area of Iowa, Nebraska, and South Dakota.  

St. Luke's offers a full range of services and programs. From our state-of-the-art surgical center and the area's most recognized birth center to 24/7 cardiovascular care and a Level III emergency department. 

Mercy One Siouxland Medical Center 

Mercy One Siouxland Medical Center-Sioux City is a regional medical center that serves western Iowa, eastern Nebraska, and southeastern South Dakota. 

In addition to the main hospital in Sioux City, Mercy One–Sioux City operates a Level II trauma center, primary care clinic network, specialty care clinics and home health services, paramedic services, hospice services, and a freestanding surgery center.

Beyond Your Residency

What our alumni had to say about choosing Family Medicine Residency in Sioux City

 

“I wanted a program that would give me a solid foundation in the academic side of medicine and enough hands-on experience to put that knowledge into practice. But most of all, I wanted a place where I could be comfortable and feel at home for the next three years.”

"The opportunity for exceptional training in full-spectrum family medicine at a community-based and truly unopposed residency program."

"The city is not too big and not too small. It offers a small-town feel while having enough to do. Also, I was impressed by the warmth and camaraderie of the residents and faculty."

"The strength of the OB training and the opportunity to be at an unopposed program where there are no other residencies in town. The confidence of the residents was very impressive."

"I formed a great connection (during a one month rotation) with the residents and really felt like they took me in to their “family.’”