Regional Anesthesia

What Regional Anesthesia Fellows Actually Do Day-to-Day

A regional anesthesia fellow spends the majority of clinical time performing and supervising ultrasound-guided peripheral nerve blocks and neuraxial techniques for surgical patients, predominantly in orthopedic, trauma, plastics, and general surgery settings. The workday is procedurally dense from the start: pre-operative block placement, real-time ultrasound guidance, catheter insertion for continuous infusions, and immediate assessment of block success before the patient enters the operating room.

Beyond the block room, fellows cover an acute pain service — rounding on admitted patients with indwelling catheters, titrating infusions, troubleshooting inadequate analgesia, and consulting on complex multimodal pain plans. This service role is where much of the teaching happens: fellows are expected to teach CA-1 and CA-2 residents technique, anatomy, and decision-making simultaneously. That dual cognitive load — performing a technically demanding procedure while explaining it in real time — is a defining feature of the fellowship year.

General anesthesia call burden is typically lighter than in cardiac or neuroanesthesia fellowships. Most programs assign fellows to overnight call on a limited, structured schedule rather than the continuous heavy call of other subspecialties. Weekend duties usually center on acute pain rounding rather than full operative coverage. The result is a fellowship year that is procedurally intense during standard hours but structurally more predictable than several other anesthesiology tracks.

The 30-Second Specialty Snapshot

Core Procedures and Technical Skills You Will Build

The procedural repertoire is what distinguishes this fellowship from general anesthesia practice. By the end of training, a fellow is expected to perform the following with independence and to teach each at a supervision level:

The volume and variety of truncal plane blocks has expanded substantially over the past decade. Fellows entering now will encounter a literature still actively debating optimal block selection for many truncal indications — which means the intellectual component of the fellowship is not just technical execution but critical appraisal of evolving evidence.

Personality and Cognitive Profile of a Strong Fit

Regional anesthesia selects for a specific combination of traits that is worth examining honestly before committing.

Anatomy as a genuine interest, not just a requirement. Three-dimensional sonoanatomy — interpreting ultrasound in real time, mentally rotating structures, correlating probe position to needle trajectory — is the core cognitive skill. Physicians who find anatomy intrinsically interesting tend to develop this skill faster and find the daily work more satisfying. Those who tolerated anatomy in medical school but did not find it compelling often find the repetitive ultrasound interpretation tedious rather than engaging.

Fine motor precision under observation. Block placement happens in a pre-operative holding area with multiple observers: surgeons waiting, nurses documenting, residents watching, patients anxious. The fellow must maintain technical precision in a non-sterile, socially complex environment while narrating the procedure. This is a different skill profile from OR anesthesia, where the attending-patient dyad is more contained.

Comfort with probabilistic outcomes. Even expertly placed blocks fail or are incomplete. A fellow who interprets block failure as personal inadequacy will struggle. The correct cognitive frame is: regional anesthesia involves inherent variability in patient anatomy, local anesthetic spread, and nerve response — failure rates are a feature of the probability distribution, not a measure of competence. Backup plans are always in place and using them is routine, not exceptional.

Teaching orientation. If the prospect of explaining needle angulation and hydrodissection for the fortieth time to a different CA-1 generates dread rather than engagement, the fellowship year will be exhausting. The fellows who thrive find genuine satisfaction in watching a resident's technique improve across a rotation.

Multidisciplinary collaboration tolerance. Regional fellows work closely with orthopedic surgeons who have strong preferences about block selection and timing, with nursing staff managing catheter infusions on the floor, and with pain pharmacy on adjuvant protocols. The role requires diplomatic negotiation of these relationships, not just technical execution.

What You Should Love (and Tolerate) About This Work

What the work rewards:

What the work requires you to tolerate:

How Regional Fellowship Compares to Pain Medicine and CRNA Practice

Regional anesthesia fellowship vs. pain medicine fellowship: These are frequently conflated and are genuinely distinct career paths. Pain medicine fellowship (ACGME-accredited, one year post-residency) trains physicians in chronic pain management: interventional procedures including epidural steroid injections, medial branch blocks, spinal cord stimulation, and intrathecal drug delivery, alongside pharmacological and psychological management of chronic pain conditions. The patient population is longitudinal — patients return across months and years. Regional anesthesia fellowship is perioperative and acute: patients are encountered pre-operatively, managed through the surgical episode, and discharged from the acute pain service within days. A physician drawn to long-term therapeutic relationships, complex chronic disease management, or neuromodulation is better suited to pain medicine. A physician drawn to procedural density, surgical collaboration, and immediate analgesic feedback belongs in regional.

Some anesthesiologists complete both fellowships sequentially. This is not common, is logistically demanding, and should be planned deliberately rather than as a hedge. If you are considering both, clarify which clinical environment you actually want to work in daily before adding training years.

Regional anesthesia fellowship vs. advanced CRNA regional practice: Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetists (CRNAs) with advanced training perform peripheral nerve blocks independently in many practice settings, particularly in states with full practice authority. This is a legitimate point of comparison that applicants should understand clearly. The physician-level regional anesthesia fellowship confers a different scope: the ability to design and lead institutional ERAS programs, serve as the supervising authority for regional technique within a department, conduct and publish original research on block outcomes, and function as the clinical expert consulted when complications arise (including vascular injury, pneumothorax, or local anesthetic systemic toxicity management). In academic and large health system environments, the fellowship-trained regional anesthesiologist occupies a distinct role from advanced practice providers performing blocks under protocol. In smaller private settings, the distinction is more variable. Know the practice environment you are entering.

Lifestyle, Hours, and Call Reality

Regional anesthesia fellowship is generally positioned in the middle tier of anesthesiology subspecialty lifestyle — better than cardiac, neuro, or critical care anesthesia fellowships in terms of overnight call frequency and weekend burden; less predictable than a pure outpatient pain medicine practice.

Typical structure includes defined pre-operative block shifts that start early (surgical schedules drive this, not fellow preference), an acute pain service rounding responsibility that may extend into late afternoon, and a call schedule that is lighter than general anesthesia call but present. Weekend acute pain rounding is standard at most programs — catheter management does not pause on Saturday. The fellow covering weekend rounds is typically doing catheter troubleshooting and infusion management, not performing new blocks or running operating rooms.

Geographic flexibility after training is a genuine lifestyle asset. Regional expertise is valued across practice settings and geographic markets. Fellowship-trained regional anesthesiologists are not concentrated only in major academic centers; orthopedic-heavy private practices in smaller metropolitan areas actively recruit this skillset. For applicants with geographic constraints due to family, partner career, or personal preference, this portability is worth factoring into the decision.

The fellowship year itself is demanding in a specific way: the procedural volume is high, the teaching load is continuous, and the scholarly requirements (most programs expect a research project, abstract, or manuscript) layer onto clinical duties. Applicants should not expect a recovery year. They should expect a year of accelerated skill acquisition with a defined endpoint.

Compensation Trajectory and Practice Settings

For current compensation figures, see the PGY Zero compensation data page, which is updated each application cycle from published survey sources. What follows is structural context that does not change year to year.

Regional anesthesia expertise commands a premium in orthopedic-heavy private group practices because block proficiency directly enables higher surgical throughput, reduces PACU time, and supports same-day discharge programs — all of which are economically significant to the surgical practice and the facility. Fellowship-trained regional anesthesiologists in these settings frequently bill at higher procedural volume and may negotiate compensation structures that reflect the revenue their block proficiency generates.

Academic practice offers a different trade: lower base compensation relative to private practice, offset by protected time for research, teaching salary support, and the institutional infrastructure (simulation labs, ultrasound equipment, departmental backup) that supports continued skill development and scholarly output. For applicants who want to remain in the literature-generating center of the field, academic practice is the realistic path.

Locum tenens coverage is a meaningful option for fellowship-trained regional anesthesiologists, particularly those with strong catheter and truncal block skills. Short-term coverage at orthopedic centers or ambulatory surgery facilities is a documented use case for this skillset. This is relevant for applicants evaluating flexibility during early career transitions or geographic moves.

The Residency-to-Fellowship Pipeline: What Programs Look For

Regional anesthesia fellowships are not ERAS-integrated in the same standardized way as many other subspecialty fellowships. Application processes vary by program — some use a centralized system, others accept direct applications. Confirm the application mechanism for each program during the application year.

What makes an applicant competitive is largely consistent across programs:

Signals of Poor Fit Worth Taking Seriously

The following are not disqualifying, but they are meaningful misalignment signals that warrant honest self-examination before committing to this path:

The Self-Assessment Checklist: 10 Questions Before You Commit

Answer honestly. There is no scoring key that overrides your own judgment — the point is to surface genuine hesitation before you commit a fellowship year and shape a career around this decision.

  1. When you perform ultrasound in any context, do you find the image interpretation engaging rather than obligatory?
  2. Can you describe, without looking it up, the sonoanatomic appearance of the brachial plexus at the interscalene level? (If not yet — is learning this the kind of thing you find genuinely interesting?)
  3. When a procedure does not go as planned, does your recovery time allow you to return to full function for the next case, or does the failure occupy you for hours?
  4. Do you find it satisfying to teach the same procedural skill repeatedly to different learners, or does repetitive teaching feel like time taken from doing?
  5. Are you comfortable working in a pre-operative holding area with multiple stakeholders present and competing for your attention?
  6. Is the perioperative episode — acute, defined, measurable — a satisfying frame for patient care, or do you want to know what happens to patients months later?
  7. Do you follow ASRA annual meeting abstracts or the Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine journal? If not, does that feel like a gap you want to close?
  8. Can you identify at least one fellowship-trained regional anesthesiologist at your current or planned residency institution whose career trajectory appeals to you?
  9. Are you willing to spend a year with a meaningful teaching burden — not as a secondary role, but as a core expectation?
  10. Is your geographic flexibility sufficient to pursue the program that is actually the best fit, rather than the geographically convenient one?

If you answered no to more than three of these, do not dismiss regional anesthesia immediately — but identify specifically which mismatches concern you most and discuss them with a regional anesthesiologist you trust before proceeding.

How to Test Your Fit During Medical School and Early Residency

Fit testing before committing to a fellowship application is both possible and strategically valuable. These are the highest-yield mechanisms:

Next Steps If Regional Anesthesia Fellowship Feels Right

If this page has reinforced rather than complicated your interest, the following adjacent resources on PGY Zero are your logical next steps:

The decision to pursue fellowship is a decision about what you want your working days to look like for the next thirty years. Regional anesthesia offers a procedurally rich, technically evolving, and structurally predictable career for the physician who finds genuine satisfaction in precision, teaching, and perioperative impact. It is a poor fit for physicians who want longitudinal relationships, primarily cognitive work, or a different procedural domain. Both conclusions are legitimate. The goal of this page is to give you the information to reach the right one for you.