VA Palo Alto Residency: Ocular Disease – Neuro Optometry – Brain Injury Vision Rehabilitation
NOTE: For information on nondiscrimination in federally conducted education and training programs, see: VHA Directive 1018.
Introductory Webinar Video
Mission Statement
The Optometric Residency Program at the University of California, Berkeley School of Optometry and its affiliate programs seek to recruit and admit the best-qualified post-graduate optometrists and to provide them with advanced clinical education and concentrated clinical experience in specialty areas of optometry in an institutional or hospital-based setting. This mentored educational and clinical experience prepares optometrists for lifelong scholarship in patient care, education, and optometric leadership.
The mission of the Optometric Residency in Ocular Disease/Neuro Optometry/Brain Injury Vision Rehabilitation at the Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System (VAPAHCS) is twofold:
1. To provide a mentored learning environment in which the resident develops increased proficiency in the delivery of eye, vision, and health care to the veteran population served by VAPAHCS.
2. To provide a mentored learning environment in which the resident attains advanced skills in the specialty of adult brain injury vision rehabilitation.
This mentored educational and clinical experience prepares the optometrist for lifelong scholarship in patient care, education, and optometric leadership.
1 position available.Program Goals
The program’s goals are to provide the resident with a varied clinical experience in primary optometric care and provide a didactic program that complements their clinical experience. The program endeavors to promote an appreciation of the significance of scholarly activity and professional development. Resident mentors will also educate and train the resident in the specialty skill of brain injury vision rehabilitation.
Time Commitment
The Residency year is from July 1 to June 30.
The resident is expected to be in clinic five days per week, Monday-Friday, 8:00am to 4:30pm. There are no after-hours on-call duties.
Primary Optometric Eye Care
In the primary eye care setting, the resident will provide primary optometric care to a diverse population of patients including in-hospital patients, outpatients and psychiatric patients. The patient population is predominately middle-aged to elderly males, with a high incidence of ocular disease. Primary Care Optometry clinics are located at the Palo Alto VA and Livermore VA.
Brain Injury Vision Rehabilitation
The Ocular Disease/Neuro Optometry/Brain Injury Vision Rehabilitation resident will gain experience providing vision rehabilitation to patients with mild to severe traumatic brain injury as well as other acquired brain injuries. Patients include those with acute and chronic brain injuries and care is provided in outpatient as well as inpatient settings. The encounters will emphasize diagnosis and management of binocular vision, oculomotor, and neuro-optometric conditions. Optometry is a part of the interdisciplinary team approach to rehabilitation. In addition to optometric rehabilitation, the resident will gain experience working with rehabilitation instructors in all disciplines, including neuropsychology, speech pathology, occupational therapy, physical therapy, recreational therapy, and physical medicine & rehabilitation. Working with instructors from other areas provides well-rounded insight into the care of this complex patient population.
Didactic Curriculum And Teaching Activity
- Weekly optometry conferences, Core Studies, Journal Club, monthly low vision/polytrauma journal club, and periodic Grand Rounds.
- Optometry Conferences cover brain injury vision, ocular disease, and primary care topics.
- Core Studies review major clinical trials impacting eye care.
- Current and significant past literature are analyzed and discussed during Journal Club.
- Grand Rounds are an interactive, educational program on various ocular disease topics emphasizing live patient exams and a review of current concepts.
- The resident presents three formal lectures at the Berkeley Optometry Affiliated Resident Lecture Series, as well as informal case presentations throughout the year.
- The resident participates in the presentation of slide quizzes with 4th year optometric externs.
Requirements for Residency Completion
- Complete one year of training.
- Three oral case presentations as part of the Berkeley Optometry Affiliated Resident Lecture Series.
- Submit a manuscript of publishable quality on either a case or research with approval from the Program Coordinators and Director of Affiliated Residency Programs.
- Submit a poster abstract to a major optometric conference (e.g. AAO).
- Submission of completed patient logs as well as program and mentor evaluations.
- Favorable recommendation from the Program Coordinators.
Benefits
- Yearly stipend of $53,956 (AY 2023-2024).
- No fees or tuition.
- 13 days accrued vacation leave.
- 13 days accrued sick leave.
- Approved leave for educational meetings (e.g., AAO, etc.).
- Professional liability covered under the Federal Tort Claims Act.
- Health insurance and life insurance.
- 11 paid federal holidays.
Admissions Eligibility Criteria
- US citizen
- An optometry degree from an accredited optometry school (ACOE).
- Cumulative GPA 3.00 on a 4.00 scale for optometric education required.
- Passage of NBEO I, II, and TMOD prior to the ORMatch match.
- If male, registered with Selective Service prior to their 26th birthday. This can be obtained at (www.sss.gov).
How To Apply
Use the button below to apply for a residency via the Optometric Residency Match (ORMatch) program. The Optometry Residency Match (“ORMatch”) is an application service and match that places applicants into optometry residency training positions.
ORMatchThe National Matching Service requires the submission of the following pieces of information that will later be supplied to VA Palo Alto.
- NBEO scores
- Letter of intent
- Curriculum vitae (CV)
- Copy of optometry school transcripts
- Three letters of recommendation.
Selection Procedure
- After thoroughly evaluating the applicant pool, top candidates will be invited for an interview.
- Interviews will be conducted by videoconference. If desired, a visit to our campus and a tour of our facilities can be arranged.
- The program coordinators and faculty members decide which candidates to rank for the match and determine the sequential ranking of those candidates
- The final candidate ranking is submitted to ORMatch by the Residency Coordinators.
- ORMatch contacts the program with the results of the match.
- The program coordinators and the program director contact the matched candidates and confirm their intent to enroll in the residency program.
- Matched candidates submit official optometry school transcripts to the Residency Coordinators as required by the UC Berkeley Graduate Division.
Residency Coordinator
David Yang, OD, FAAOVA Palo Alto HCS
3801 Miranda Avenue
112/OPTOM
Palo Alto, CA 94304-1290 (650) 493-5000 x68041
David.Yang@va.gov
Co-residency Coordinator
Lee Vien, OD, FAAOVA Palo Alto HCS
3801 Miranda Avenue
112/OPTOM
Palo Alto, CA 94304-1290 (650) 493-5000 x68024
Lee.vien@va.gov