Information for Medical Students
We are always excited to have medical students rotate with us! For UCSF students, there are 2-week third-year medical student electives to introduce you to the field of plastic surgery, as well as the traditional 4-week sub-internships available for UCSF students and visiting students.
Please click on the link below for more information regarding Visiting Students and how to apply.
We also have an abundance of resources for medical students and new residents, from instructional videos by our faculty members to some instructional materials. The clerkship director is Dr. Mary McGrath.
Instructional Videos
Wound Healing
Professor of Surgery
Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
Director of Resident and Fellow Affairs, UCSF Graduate Medical Education
Flaps and Grafts
Hani Sbitany, M.D.
Associate Professor of Surgery
Division of Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery
Co-Director, UCSF Center for Reconstructive Microsurgery
Director, Microsurgical Breast Reconstruction
Hand Surgery
Assistant Professor
Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
Head and Neck Surgery
Introduction by Audrey Nguyen, M.D., Plastic Surgery Resident
Jason H. Pomerantz, M.D.
Associate Professor of Surgery
Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
Surgical Director, Craniofacial Center
Director, Pomerantz Lab
Surgery Grand Rounds: Breast Implant-Associated Anaplastic Large-Cell Lymphoma (BIA-ALCL)
Mary H. McGrath, M.D., M.P.H.
Professor of Surgery
Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
Director of Resident and Fellow Affairs, UCSF Graduate Medical Education
Plastic Surgery Essentials For Students
This book has been written primarily for medical students, with constant attention to the thought, “Is this something a student should know when he or she finishes medical school?” It is not designed to be a comprehensive text, but rather an outline that can be read in the limited time available in a burgeoning curriculum. It is designed to be read from beginning to end. Plastic surgery had its beginning thousands of years ago, when clever surgeons in India reconstructed the nose by transferring a flap of cheek and then forehead skin.
It is a modern field, stimulated by the challenging reconstructive problems of the unfortunate victims of the World Wars. The advent of the operating microscope has thrust the plastic surgeon of today into the forefront of advances in small vessel and nerve repair, culminating in the successful replantation of amputated parts as small as distal fingers. Further, these techniques have been utilized to perform the first composite tissue transplantations of both hands and partial faces. The field is broad and varied and this book covers the many areas of involvement and training of today’s plastic surgeons. The American Society of Plastic Surgeons is proud to provide complimentary copies of the Plastic Surgery Essentials for Students handbook to all third year medical students in the United States and Canada.