Pediatric Emergency Medicine Fellowship

What Pediatric Emergency Medicine Fellows Actually Do

PEM fellowship is shift-based training inside a pediatric emergency department, but the clinical breadth is wider than most residents anticipate before they start. On any given shift a fellow manages the full spectrum from low-acuity URIs and lacerations through septic infants, status epilepticus, respiratory failure, and multi-system trauma. The triage population skews younger and sicker than adult EDs in relative terms: children decompensate faster and compensate longer before crashing, which means the fellow's job is pattern recognition under time pressure with a narrow margin for error.

Procedurally, fellows become proficient in pediatric airway management—including RSI, video laryngoscopy, and surgical airway as a rescue skill—procedural sedation, lumbar puncture across age ranges, intraosseous access, chest tube placement, reduction of fractures and dislocations, and wound care including complex laceration repair. Point-of-care ultrasound is now woven into fellowship curricula at essentially all ACGME-accredited programs; fellows are expected to reach competency in core POCUS applications including cardiac, lung, and soft tissue scanning.

Beyond the procedure room, the cognitive load centers on pharmacologic complexity. Weight-based dosing, age-adjusted physiologic norms, and the absence of many pediatric-specific drug trials mean fellows learn to reason from first principles while consulting robust reference systems in real time. Family communication is not incidental—it is a clinical skill the fellowship explicitly develops, because caregivers are both essential historians and active participants in acute decisions. Fellows who underestimate that dimension tend to find PEM more interpersonally demanding than expected.

The shift structure means fellows typically see defined start and end times, limited post-shift continuity responsibility, and a schedule that rotates through days, nights, and weekends. There are required rotations outside the ED—pediatric critical care, anesthesia/airway, and toxicology are standard at most programs—which temporarily interrupts the shift cadence and exposes fellows to sicker, longer-stay patients. This is intentional: ACGME competency requirements for PEM fellowship include exposure to the PICU environment precisely because the line between a stabilized PEM patient and a critical care admission is thin and the fellow should be fluent on both sides of it.

The Training Pipeline: Pediatrics Residency → PEM Fellowship

PEM is a subspecialty of pediatrics under the ACGME. The standard pathway is a three-year ACGME-accredited pediatrics residency followed by a three-year ACGME-accredited PEM fellowship. At the end of fellowship, graduates are eligible to sit for the American Board of Pediatrics subspecialty certifying examination in Pediatric Emergency Medicine. The total training commitment from medical school graduation through board eligibility is therefore seven years post-MD/DO.

There is a parallel pathway: emergency medicine residency graduates may also pursue PEM fellowship, and a small number of programs accept EM-trained applicants. Board eligibility through that route flows through the American Board of Emergency Medicine. The two pathways converge in the same clinical environment, but program culture, fellow mix, and the specific competency expectations can differ. If you are an EM resident evaluating PEM fellowship, verify which track a given program's fellowship formally supports before investing in that relationship.

Fellowship programs are three years for ACGME accreditation purposes. Some programs have integrated scholarly or research tracks that extend training by an additional year, typically with protected research time and mentored project completion. This is not required for board eligibility but is common in high-research-output academic programs and affects the timeline for those considering academic careers.

The application cycle for PEM fellowship runs through the SF Match (not NRMP). See the current season timeline on this site for specific deadlines, because application open dates, rank submission windows, and match dates shift year to year and any date printed in prose will eventually mislead a reader.

Core Competencies Developed During PEM Fellowship

The competency architecture of PEM fellowship is procedure-heavy relative to most other pediatric subspecialties, and cognitively demanding in ways that reward generalist thinking rather than deep single-organ expertise. The following inventory is based on ACGME program requirements for PEM and reflects what graduates are expected to demonstrate before independent practice.

Procedural skills

Cognitive and systems competencies

Lifestyle Profile: Shifts, Flexibility, and Work-Life Fit

PEM fellowship operates on a shift schedule. That is the structural reality from which everything else about lifestyle flows, and it differentiates PEM from most other pediatric subspecialties in ways that cut both directions.

On the favorable side: shifts have defined endpoints. You are not on call for your patients after the shift closes. You are not responsible for rounding on a service the following morning. Continuity responsibility is transferred at sign-out. For physicians who value cognitive compartmentalization—the ability to close the clinical day and genuinely disengage—shift medicine offers something no continuity specialty can replicate.

On the unfavorable side: the schedule distributes across nights, weekends, and holidays for the duration of your career, not just training. PEM fellowship does not compress that burden into a training period after which you age out of overnight call; it is the permanent structure of the specialty. Fellows who discover mid-training that they have strong preferences against chronic night work are encountering something that will not improve after fellowship ends.

During fellowship specifically, required off-service rotations—PICU, anesthesia, toxicology, and others depending on the program—temporarily shift the schedule to a different service's structure, which can include traditional call. This is transitional and bounded, but worth anticipating logistically.

Compared to adult EM: PEM fellowships generally involve somewhat lower raw patient volume per shift, longer average time per patient (reflecting family communication demands and higher acuity complexity), and a narrower acuity spectrum at the upper end (the highest-acuity pediatric trauma goes to level 1 pediatric trauma centers, which are where most large academic PEM programs sit). Compared to general pediatric hospitalist work: PEM shifts are higher acuity, more procedural, and typically shorter in duration, while hospitalist schedules often involve 24-hour shifts or 7-on/7-off blocks that concentrate time differently.

Part-time and reduced-schedule attending positions in PEM exist at both academic and community sites and are more structurally available than in most cognitive subspecialties, because shift coverage is inherently modular. This is a genuine flexibility advantage for physicians managing caregiving, research projects, or geographic constraints later in career.

Compensation and Job Market Realities

See the compensation data page on this site for current figures and source citations. Inline salary numbers in editorial prose become misleading within a single contract cycle, so this section addresses structure rather than specific figures.

PEM attending compensation is higher than general academic pediatrics and higher than general pediatric hospitalist medicine. It is lower than most adult emergency medicine attending compensation, which reflects both market differences and the academic concentration of PEM jobs. The additional three years of fellowship training represents real opportunity cost; physicians who pursue PEM instead of entering the general pediatrics or pediatric hospitalist job market are trading early earnings for subspecialty training, and the break-even point in lifetime earnings relative to a hospitalist career depends on the specific position and practice context.

The job market for PEM attendings is predominantly academic or children's hospital-affiliated. Freestanding children's hospitals and large academic medical centers employ the majority of PEM attendings. Community hospital emergency departments that see mixed adult and pediatric populations typically do not require PEM fellowship training for their staff, meaning the PEM credential primarily unlocks positions at tertiary and quaternary pediatric centers. This has geographic implications: large children's hospitals cluster in metropolitan areas, which constrains practice location more than general pediatrics does.

Academic positions in PEM typically carry research and educational expectations on top of clinical work. Protected research time varies substantially by program and division, and the absence of a robust research track during fellowship is a real disadvantage when competing for positions at high-output academic programs. Community-model positions at children's hospitals exist and are growing as pediatric care networks expand, but they remain a smaller share of the PEM job market than the community sector represents in adult EM.

Who Thrives in PEM: Personality and Clinical Fit Signals

Satisfaction in PEM correlates with a specific cognitive and temperamental profile. This is not a checklist for self-marketing; it is a framework for honest self-assessment, because discovering the mismatch after fellowship is expensive in time, money, and career inertia.

Physicians who do well in PEM tend to operate effectively under diagnostic uncertainty with incomplete information and time pressure. The ED does not offer the luxury of extended workup before initial management; fellows learn to initiate treatment on a working diagnosis while the full picture develops in parallel. Residents who find that pattern energizing—who experience the rapid pivot between hypotheses as satisfying rather than anxiety-generating—are describing a trait that sustains a PEM career.

Procedural appetite matters. PEM is one of the more procedurally active fellowship tracks in pediatrics. Fellows who approach procedures with confidence that develops into pleasure—who want to be the person in the room when a difficult airway presents—will find that PEM delivers on that preference at every career stage. Fellows who find procedures aversive and perform them only under obligation are choosing a specialty that will ask them to do something they dislike on every shift indefinitely.

Comfort with family dynamics under stress is non-negotiable. The patient in PEM is always accompanied by at least one frightened adult. The clinical interaction is inherently triangulated: child, caregiver, and physician. Physicians who find that triangulation depleting or inefficient—who want to communicate with patients directly and without mediation—will experience PEM as structurally frustrating. Physicians who find family communication genuinely interesting and who read caregivers well tend to report higher satisfaction.

High-acuity tolerance is different from adrenaline-seeking. PEM does see genuine emergencies—pediatric arrests, critical airway events, decompensated sepsis. But the majority of shifts involve a mix of urgent and non-urgent cases, and the emotional weight of bad outcomes on children is distinctive. Physicians who romanticize the high-acuity moments without fully processing what it costs emotionally to resuscitate a child in front of their family, and sometimes not succeed, are not well-calibrated for what PEM actually delivers over a career.

Comfort with episodic rather than longitudinal care is a structural prerequisite. PEM offers almost no continuity with individual patients. You will not know how the child you treated for first-time seizure is doing six months later unless you happen to see them in follow-up by coincidence. Physicians who derive primary meaning from longitudinal relationship and watching patients develop over time will find PEM structurally unfulfilling regardless of how much they enjoy individual shifts.

How PEM Differs from Adult Emergency Medicine

The comparison between PEM and adult EM matters for two groups: pediatrics residents considering fellowship, and EM residents considering a PEM fellowship pathway. The differences are substantive enough to be decision-relevant.

Physiologic framework

Pediatric physiology is not simply scaled adult physiology. Neonates, infants, toddlers, school-age children, and adolescents each represent distinct physiologic substates with different normal vital sign ranges, different volume of distribution for drugs, different anatomic airway geometry, and different compensatory mechanisms in shock. PEM fellows develop a working fluency across this entire spectrum, which requires ongoing active cognition that adult EM does not. The knowledge base is narrower in terms of disease entities (children have fewer chronic comorbidities and less cardiovascular disease) but wider in terms of developmental physiology.

Procedural geometry

Procedures performed on small children are technically distinct. Laryngoscopy on a neonate, IV access on a twenty-kilogram toddler, and lumbar puncture on a one-month-old require fine motor precision and positional technique that differs meaningfully from adult analogs. Adult EM training does not build this fluency automatically, which is one reason ACGME-accredited PEM fellowship exists as a distinct training track rather than simply a rotation block.

Pharmacologic complexity

Weight-based dosing with verification steps is standard practice in PEM. Errors in pediatric medication dosing are a well-documented patient safety problem, and PEM systems—Broselow tape, electronic weight-based calculators, pharmacist integration—are explicitly organized around that risk. Fellows internalize a verification discipline that is different from adult EM practice.

Disease spectrum and acuity distribution

Adult EDs see a substantial burden of cardiovascular emergencies, respiratory failure in older patients with COPD, and multi-system geriatric complexity. PEM sees more respiratory emergencies in young children (bronchiolitis, croup, asthma), infectious emergencies (sepsis in infants, meningitis), and traumatic injuries with pediatric-specific patterns. The overall volume of true critical illness per shift is lower in PEM than in a high-volume adult ED, which affects skill maintenance and the rhythm of adrenaline exposure over a career.

Culture and fellowship environment

PEM fellowships exist inside children's hospitals and pediatric departments. The institutional culture, the values around family-centered care, and the peer environment during fellowship are shaped by pediatrics. EM residents pursuing PEM fellowship sometimes describe a cultural adjustment in both directions: the pediatric frame is different from adult EM culture in ways that are difficult to fully anticipate before immersion. Rotating in a pediatric ED during residency before committing to fellowship is one of the most practical steps toward honest self-assessment on this dimension.

Signs PEM May Not Be the Right Fit

This section uses the language "signs PEM may not fit" rather than "red flags" deliberately. The framing here is about applicant self-assessment, not program gatekeeping.

Building a Competitive PEM Fellowship Application

PEM fellowship is competitive relative to most other pediatric subspecialties. Programs are looking for evidence that an applicant will succeed clinically, contribute academically, and represent the program well in the field. The following signals are consistent across what program directors in this subspecialty have described publicly and in the literature.

Clinical foundation

Strong performance in pediatrics residency is table stakes. Beyond general residency performance, programs are specifically looking for meaningful ED exposure during residency—elective time in the pediatric ED, ideally at more than one institution, demonstrating that the applicant's interest in PEM is tested rather than hypothetical. An applicant who has done multiple PEM electives and can speak concretely about the clinical cases, the procedural learning, and the patient population demonstrates a different level of commitment than one citing interest without documented exposure.

Letters of recommendation

A letter from a PEM attending who has worked with you clinically carries more weight than generic pediatrics letters. Programs want evidence that PEM faculty have assessed you in the PEM environment and found you capable. If you are applying from a program without a large PEM division, doing an away elective at a program with an established fellowship is a direct way to generate this letter and signal.

Research and scholarly activity

PEM is predominantly an academic specialty. Programs at major children's hospitals have active research programs and expect fellows to complete scholarly work. An applicant who enters fellowship with no research experience is at a disadvantage in both the application and the fellowship itself. Relevant research does not have to be PEM-specific: QI projects, simulation research, clinical trials in general pediatrics, and health services research are all directly applicable. A published or presented project is meaningful; a project in progress with a clear mentor and defined question is functional. No project and no relationship with a research mentor is a signal problem worth addressing before application.

Program fit

PEM fellowship programs are small—typically two to four fellows per year at most programs. Personal fit matters in ways it does not at large EM residencies with twenty residents per year. Applicants who have engaged with a program's research, attended their presentations at PAS or ACEP, or who can articulate why a specific program's structure matches their career goals are communicating genuine interest. Generic application language is legible as generic to program directors who read hundreds of applications.

Application metrics

For Step score benchmarks, see the data pages on this site. In general terms, PEM fellowship programs at major academic children's hospitals apply score thresholds in initial screening, and applicants below program-specific cutoffs may not receive interview invitations regardless of other application strength. Applicants with licensing examination performance concerns should research program-specific policies rather than assuming a universal cutoff applies everywhere. Programs vary, and some programs weigh research and letters heavily enough to offer interviews to applicants whose metrics alone would not have cleared a rigid screen.

Research and Academic Opportunities in PEM

PEM has a research infrastructure that punches above its size relative to other pediatric subspecialties. The Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN) is a federally funded multicenter research consortium that has produced landmark studies in head trauma, fever management, and resuscitation. Association with a PECARN node program is a meaningful marker of research infrastructure; fellows at these programs have access to collaborative study designs, existing data infrastructure, and mentorship from established investigators.

Common study designs in PEM research include:

For residents entering fellowship with limited research background, QI and simulation projects are typically the most accessible entry points—they require less IRB overhead and can produce presentable work within a fellowship year. For applicants with prior research experience who want to pursue an academic trajectory, aligning with a program whose faculty have active funded projects in your area of interest before you rank is more important than program prestige ranking in the abstract.

Fellowship programs with protected research time—either embedded in the standard three-year structure or offered as a fourth-year research track—are the appropriate target for applicants who want an academic career in PEM. The distinction between programs on this dimension is real and worth investigating directly with current fellows during interview season.

Subspecialty Niches Within PEM

PEM is itself a subspecialty, but career differentiation within PEM is possible and increasingly common. These niches are worth knowing before fellowship because program selection and fellowship projects should be aligned with the niche if you have an early preference.

Pediatric critical care crossover

Some PEM attendings hold dual fellowship training in both PEM and pediatric critical care (PICU). This dual-trained pathway requires additional fellowship time but opens positions that span both environments—particularly relevant at smaller children's hospitals that staff a combined ED/ICU model, and at programs in resource-limited settings. The career flexibility is real; the training cost in time is also real.

Toxicology

Medical toxicology fellowship (a separate one- to two-year ACGME fellowship) is accessible to PEM fellowship graduates. PEM physicians who pursue toxicology often work across the ED and poison control consultation context. The combined profile is most relevant at academic programs with active poison control center relationships.

Simulation education

PEM is one of the fields where simulation-based education has the strongest evidence base and the most active research communities. Fellows who develop simulation curriculum development and research skills during fellowship are competitive for simulation director positions at children's hospitals, which are growing in both number and prestige.

Global emergency medicine

A small but visible niche involves PEM physicians working in global health contexts—designing pediatric emergency systems in low- and middle-income countries, training local providers, and conducting implementation research. This pathway typically requires early relationship-building with global health faculty during fellowship, protected time for international work, and tolerance for a career that operates partly outside institutional structures.

Child maltreatment

Child abuse pediatrics is a separate subspecialty, but PEM physicians frequently serve as first-line evaluators in suspected maltreatment cases and some develop subspecialty expertise in forensic evaluation, multidisciplinary team leadership, and policy work in this area. This niche involves high emotional weight and requires specific competency development; some PEM programs have faculty with dedicated expertise who can mentor fellows in this area.

What PEM Attendings Reflect on After Training

The following observations synthesize perspectives that PEM attendings have shared in published interviews, conference presentations, and on-record program director commentary. These are not individual attributions and should not be read as such; they represent recurring themes in how experienced PEM physicians describe their career trajectory in retrospect.

On procedural expectations: "I underestimated how much the procedural volume varies by program. I did my fellowship at a high-volume center and arrived at my first attending job expecting the same density of difficult airways and resuscitations. The acuity at community children's hospitals is real but different. Skill maintenance becomes something you have to actively manage, not something the environment delivers automatically."

Why this matters: Training environment does not always match practice environment. Attendings who invest in simulation-based skills maintenance after fellowship sustain procedural competence more reliably than those who rely on ambient case volume.

On the emotional weight of pediatric outcomes: "Nobody told me—or I didn't hear it—that the bad outcomes in PEM stay with you differently than adult medicine. I was prepared to manage pediatric cardiac arrest algorithmically. I was less prepared for what it costs to do that in front of two parents and then walk back out to the waiting room."

Why this matters: Moral distress and compassion fatigue have a specific texture in pediatric emergency medicine. Programs with robust peer support structures and fellows who develop active coping frameworks early show better career longevity data than those who treat emotional processing as individual and private.

On research investment: "I wish I had started a project before fellowship, not during it. The first year of fellowship is clinically absorbing in a way that makes research feel impossible. The people in my cohort who had already published once came in with different negotiating power for protected time and different relationships with faculty."

Why this matters: Pre-fellowship research is not just an application credential—it is functional preparation for operating in an academic environment from the first week of fellowship rather than from year two.

On the geographic constraint: "I knew intellectually that PEM jobs were concentrated at children's hospitals. I didn't fully internalize what it meant to have a partner whose job market was in a different geography. That tension is manageable, but it's easier to plan for before fellowship than to discover after you've signed an academic contract."

Why this matters: The geographic concentration of PEM positions is a structural feature of the specialty, not a temporary market condition. Dual-career households should model geographic fit explicitly before committing to the PEM pathway.

Your Next Steps if PEM Resonates

The action steps below are tiered by training stage. Take the ones relevant to where you are; ignore the rest for now.

Premed and MS1–MS2

MS3–MS4

Pediatrics residents (PGY1–PGY3)

Fellowship applicants (active cycle)