Michigan Medicine campus
Hepatology Program Education

The Department of Internal Medicine Hepatology faculty provide comprehensive training in the management of acute and chronic liver diseases for the fellows in the GI Fellowship Training Program and the fourth-year advanced Transplant Hepatology Fellowship Program. The Transplant Hepatology Fellowship Program has trained a majority of the transplant hepatologists practicing in Michigan.

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Clinical Training

Outpatient Clinics

  • General Hepatology Clinics (Taubman Center and VA)
  • Cirrhosis Program
  • Fatty Liver Disease Clinic
  • Liver Transplant Clinic
  • Liver Tumor Clinic
  • Viral Hepatitis Clinic
  • Wilson Disease Clinic

Inpatient Rotations

  • Liver Inpatient Service
  • Liver Consult Service

 

Teaching Conferences

  • Clinical case discussions
  • Journal club
  • Pathology seminar
Research Training

With a broad research portfolio, the Hepatology Program’s investigations span scientific, clinical, and health services research. In addition to direct mentoring by one of the Hepatology faculty, fellows have the opportunity to pursue a 1- to 2-year master's degree course in epidemiology, clinical research and biostatistics. Research-in-progress seminars are held monthly.

Transplant Hepatology Fellowship

Providing outstanding clinical and research training for candidates to strengthen their skills and meet certification criteria.

Learn more about the Transplant Fellowship
Lectures & CME

During the year, we provide a variety of hepatology educational lectures and CME courses to U-M faculty as well as external health care providers.

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