As a first-year cardiology fellow, a big part of my job is to obtain "informed consent" for procedures.
As a cardiology fellow, I once took care of a young man with severe congestive heart failure.
The cardiology fellow, a bright, energetic man, stepped outside the room to talk with the woman's daughters.
The cardiology fellow went through her options, and the woman listened.
But the cardiology fellow who presented the case wondered how hard he should push for his patient to get one, given his age and mental state.
He is a cardiology fellow at the Yale University Medical School.
He is a surgical resident; she is a cardiology fellow.
I asked the cardiology fellow on the phone, trying to rub the sleep out of my eyes.
Dr. Rubin taught electrocardiography to countless numbers of cardiology fellows, medical residents and students.
The cardiology fellow had come into the room and was looking at the electrocardiogram strip.