Neurology Residency Program
Program Overview
Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville,ÌýFlorida — in affiliation with ÎÚÑ»ÊÓÆµ Children's Health — offers a three-year Child and Adolescent Neurology Residency. Mayo and ÎÚÑ»ÊÓÆµ have been collaborating in pediatric care for more than a decade to provide vanguard training for residents and fellows.ÌýOur residents come from across the United States and obtain academic positions and clinical positions at nationally recognized centers.
The Child and Adolescent Neurology Residency offers you an extensive inpatient and outpatient clinical experience, didactic programs and research opportunities in a tertiary care setting with coverage of all pediatrics specialties. The pediatric portions of the residency take place at ÎÚÑ»ÊÓÆµ Children's Health and adjacent tertiary care 220 bed Wolfson Children's Hospital. The adult clinical experience is provided at Mayo Clinic.
The training program supports either an academic or a clinical professional career. TheÌýÌýrequires that you complete a minimum of two years of general pediatrics residency or one year of pediatric residency, plus one year of internal medicine residency to become certified in neurology with special qualification in child neurology.ÌýThe two year general pediatric residency can be completed at the adjacent University of Florida in Jacksonville program that forms an integral portion of the Wolfson Children’s Hospital.
The Child and Adolescent Neurology Residency is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME).
- Curriculum
- Research & Training
- Salary & Benefits
- Location & Living
- Mayo Clinic Collaboration
Program Details
Curriculum and Rotations
The curriculum of the pediatric endocrinology training program is designed to fulfill the educational goals of clinical education, research, teaching and lifelong learning. Each area involves several teaching methodologies, including one-on-one teaching, "hands-on" education, independent study and formal didactic sessions.
A typical rotation schedule includes the following rotations:
Rotation | Length |
Child and adolescent neurology (inpatient and outpatient)Ìý Ìý Ìý | 12 blocks |
Adult neurology (inpatient, clinic and electives) | 12 blocks |
Core clinical neurophysiology | 2 blocks |
Child psychiatry | 1 block |
Electives | 12 blocks Ìý |
The first rotation is in child neurology so you can become oriented to ÎÚÑ»ÊÓÆµ and the Division of Neurology. Your time is divided between the inpatient and outpatient services. You also attend a course in basic neurology through afternoon teleconferences that are shared between ÎÚÑ»ÊÓÆµ and Mayo Clinic.
The adult and child neurology rotations are integrated throughout the three years. In the first year, you have seven months of adult and three months of child neurology. In the second year, there are three months of adult and three months of child neurology. Finally, in the third year, you have two months of adult and six months of child neurology.
Rotation Descriptions
Child neurology inpatient services
During hospital rotations at the adjacent 160-bed Wolfson Children's Hospital, you admit and care for patients on the neurology service and provide neurological consultations for the general pediatric service, pediatric intensive care unit, neonatal intensive care unit, pediatric medical and surgical subspecialties and the emergency department.
You gain experience with a wide variety of acute and subacute neurological diseases, from common to unusual pediatric neurological problems. The neurology inpatient service at Wolfson includes adult and child neurology residents, pediatric and at times family practice residents and students. Child and adolescent neurology residents are expected to coordinate team activity and participate in teaching of more-junior residents and students.
Child neurology outpatient services
The child neurology outpatient clinic serves both primary and consultative patients from other pediatric services. All patients are seen under the supervision of an attending child neurologist. You have the opportunity to see and manage a broad spectrum of pediatric neurological problems, and you gain experience in the evaluation and treatment of common and unusual neurological disorders in children and adolescents of all ages. In addition, you have an opportunity to work in our Neurocognitive Testing Center with our neuropsychologist and school psychologists to participate in the assessment of children with a diverse array of developmental, learning, communication and cognitive disorders.
Throughout your residency, you have your own child neurology continuity clinic for one-half day every other week. In the second and third years of training, your pediatric continuity clinic is one-half day every week. This allows you the opportunity to follow a panel of your own patients over a period of several years under the supervision of an attending pediatric neurologist.
Adult neurology inpatient services
During your inpatient assignments, you evaluate neurological disorders in a state-of-the-art inpatient setting, including the neuro-intensive care unit. You also learn to evaluate and treat neurological emergencies in the Mayo Clinic hospital emergency department and participate in daily teaching rounds.
Adult neurology outpatient services
While on outpatient rotations, you evaluate patients with common and unusual neurological conditions. You participate in daily case discussions and have outpatient education opportunities on special outpatient teaching services.
Core clinical neurophysiology
During the first two months of your second year, you and all the Mayo Clinic adult neurology residents in Florida have an intensive clinical neurophysiology rotation. This assignment includes didactic instruction and practical experience in the basics of:
- Autonomic function testing
- Electroencephalography (EEG)
- Electromyography (EMG)
- Electronystagmography
- Evoked potentials
- Nerve conduction studies (NCS)
- Polysomnography
- Interventional stroke
- Epilepsy surgery
After completing this rotation, you can spend elective time in EEG, EMG or the sleep neurology services.
Child psychiatry
In your second year, you spend one month with the Division of Psychology and Psychiatry at ÎÚÑ»ÊÓÆµ, where you are exposed to an array of inpatient and outpatient psychological and psychiatric disorders.
Electives
You have nine months of elective rotations to use throughout your residency. Typically, you have one month of elective in the first year, three months in the second year and five months in the third year. In addition to further training in child neurology, you have many elective options in clinical, laboratory specialty and research at ÎÚÑ»ÊÓÆµ, Mayo Clinic's Florida campus and Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota.
Call frequency
The call schedule is different for each rotation. Mayo Clinic College of Medicine and Science follows the recommendations of the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME).
Research and Didactic Training
Research Training
You are required to participate in one or more research projects during your Child and Adolescent Neurology Residency. To facilitate development of research skills, ÎÚÑ»ÊÓÆµ offers courses in research methodology and evidence-based medicine, which residents are encouraged to attend.
Short-term research projects require a two- to six-month commitment and do not take time away from your residency responsibilities. You have ample opportunity to pursue projects such as patient-generated case reports and chart reviews under the supervision of a faculty research mentor.
Didactic Training
Clinical conferences, seminars, small discussion groups, journal clubs and one-on-one instruction are all an integral part of the Child and Adolescent Neurology Residency. ÎÚÑ»ÊÓÆµ and Mayo Clinic have an integrated teleconference system that allows residents to attend conferences at any site without having to travel.
Child neurology residents — while on adult neurology rotations — participate in Mayo adult neurology teaching conferences and have the opportunity to attend selected adult conferences in person or via teleconference. Similarly, there are dedicated child neurology clinical conferences, journal club, neuroradiology and other conferences in which resident attendance and participation is expected. In addition, there are formal didactic courses that are required during your residency.
During your three years of training, you take core clinical neurology, neuroscience, neuroanatomy, neuropathology and ethics courses in addition to the required two-month clinical neurophysiology course at the start of your second year.
Salary & Benefits
Ìý— ÌýMayo Clinic College of Medicine & Science
Training at ÎÚÑ»ÊÓÆµ in Northeast Florida
ÎÚÑ»ÊÓÆµ Children’s Health, Jacksonville, sits right on the St. Johns River in the heart of downtown. It’s a hub for pediatric specialty care across Northeast Florida and Southeast Georgia, where outpatient clinics connect seamlessly to Wolfson Children’s Hospital next door. The environment blends the pace of an urban medical center with the personal feel of a program where learners are known and supported.
Clinic & Training Environment
Your training is built on collaboration withÌý, a 250-bed referral hospital for the region’s most complex pediatric cases. Wolfson’s Emergency Department is staffed entirely by fellowship-trained pediatric emergency medicine physicians, and the trauma center is Level III. The ORs stay busy, with surgical cases ranging from the routine to the highly specialized. Learn more about training here.Ìý

And the reach goes further. Trainees rotate with partners like the University of Florida, the Mayo Clinic, and the combined U.S. Army/Navy program. These affiliations expand learning into diverse clinical settings and connect you to a broader academic community.Ìý

Living in Jacksonville & Northeast Florida
Jacksonville has the feel of a major city with the laid-back energy of Florida’s coast. It’s a place where the St. Johns winds through downtown, beaches stretch along the coast, and history lives just down the road in St. Augustine. The cost of living is low, the food and arts scenes are growing, and outdoor spaces make it easy to get outside year-round. The River City offers plenty of ways to recharge.
Research Opportunities
Research at ÎÚÑ»ÊÓÆµ often ties directly into patient care, with access to faculty mentorship and multi-institution collaborations. Quality improvement, clinical trials, and interdisciplinary projects are all part of the mix. Trainees may present at local and national meetings, reflecting the program’s emphasis on scholarly growth alongside clinical training.Ìý

Resident & Fellow Life
Your training is more than rotations and research. It’s about feeling supported, finding community, and having space to succeed.

Community & CultureÌý|ÌýYou’ll learn in a setting that values teamwork. Across ÎÚÑ»ÊÓÆµ, Wolfson, and academic partners. Mentorship is accessible, and colleagues become friends quickly.
Wellness & Support |ÌýResources are easy to access. Counseling, peer networks, and built-in wellness resources are part of the experience. Training is demanding, but you don’t go it alone.
Everyday Perks |ÌýThe perks are real. Easy parking, walkable downtown, and a setting right on the riverfront make the day-to-day smoother.
Distinctive Setting |ÌýJacksonville offers a mix of river views, city living, and coastal escapes. Add in program-sponsored outings and social traditions, and there’s a lot to see and do outside of training.Ìý
Mayo Clinic College of Medicine and Science
This program is a collaborative effort between the Mayo Clinic College of Medicine and Science and ÎÚÑ»ÊÓÆµ Children's Health, Jacksonville.
ÎÚÑ»ÊÓÆµ is a multispecialty pediatric academic institution. Our faculty consists of 7 pediatric neurologists, 2 neuropsychologists and 3 pediatric neurosurgeons.ÌýAll faculty members are subspecialty trained, including epilepsy, neurovascular and stroke, sleep, neuromuscular and neuroimmunologists. Developmental neurology and neuropsychology are an integral portion of the program.ÌýPatients are seen at ÎÚÑ»ÊÓÆµ andÌýÌýthe main tertiary care children’s hospital serving a catchment area for 3 million people.
Apply Today
Positions
Two positions are available on a competitive basis each year in the Child and Adolescent Neurology Residency at Mayo Clinic's campus in Jacksonville, Florida.
Qualifications
To apply for the Child and Adolescent Neurology Residency, you must have successfully completed the required preliminary graduate medical education — either two years of pediatric residency or one year of pediatrics combined with one year of internal medicine residency training.
Admission to the three-year Child and Adolescent Neurology Residency can be following two years ofÌýÌý(ACGME ID 3201121055), which requires a separate ERAS application.
The transition from pediatrics is integrated, with most of our trainees choosing this route — spending the entire five years at the pediatric campuses located in Jacksonville.
We also consider residents who plan to complete two years of pediatric residency not at University of Florida College of Medicine-Jacksonville, but rather at a different Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME)-accredited graduate medical education program. This will not affect your admission to the Child and Adolescent Neurology Residency at Mayo Clinic.
Neuroscience MD. and PhD. candidates may enter the child neurology program after one year of pediatric residency, subject to approval by the American Board of Neurology and Psychiatry. Entrance is at the PGY-3 level.
Also seeÌýÌýfor Mayo Clinic School of Graduate Medical Education.
How to Apply
The academic year begins July 1 of your senior year in medical school.
The application and all supporting documentation must be submitted byÌýDec. 1, two years preceding the program start date.
You must apply through the Electronic Residency Application Service (ERAS).
- Visit theÌý.ÌýAll applications to Mayo Clinic School of Graduate Medical Education programs must include theseÌý
- Appointments are made through theÌý. Candidates must register through the NRMP website in addition to applying through ERAS.
- Applicants considered for an appointment will be invited to visit Mayo Clinic for a personal interview with the program director and selected faculty. Interviews are conducted between September and January each year.
Questions About Applying?
Raj Sheth, MD
Program Director
Email: raj.sheth@nemours.org
Lori Spier
GME Coordinator, Neurology
Phone:Ìý(904) 697-3942
Email: lori.spier@nemours.org