Program
Facilities
The University of
Virginia Hospital:
University Hospital, which completedt
construction in 1989, is a state-of-the-art 630-bed tertiary care
facility and level I trauma center. The hospital serves as the primary
site for training during the internship year for PM&R residents
opting for the four-year program, and also houses the Rehabilitation
Medicine Consultation Service.

UVA-HealthSouth Rehabilitation
Hospital :
The Rehabilitation Hospital
serves as the primary inpatient training site for the PM&R
Residency Program. This fifty-bed rehabilitation facility opened in
1998. Along with general rehabilitation beds, it houses specialty units
including beds for stroke and traumatic brain injury, and spinal
cord injury.
Other services include an aquatics center, outpatient/daytreatment
program, overnight ADL suite, and a dialysis center. Inpatient services
include speech and language therapy, physical therapy, occupational
therapy, and respiratory therapy.
UVA Musculoskeletal
Center :
Located adjacent to the Rehabilitation
Hospital, the newly-constructed 50,000 square foot Musculoskeletal
Center is designed to provide state-of-the-art rehabilitative care into
the 21st century. The facility offers "one-stop shopping" with services
including:
- Department of Physical Medicine and
Rehabilitation - Academic Offices
- PM&R Division of Spine and
Sports Care - Clinic and Academic Offices
- Rehabilitation Medicine
Library
- Rehabilitation Medicine Outpatient
Clinics
- Pain Management
Center
- Special Procedures/C-arm Fluoroscopy
and Recovery Area
- Outpatient Therapy
Center
- Prosthetics and
Orthotics
- Rehabilitation
Engineering
- Radiology Services including
MRI
Kluge Children's Rehabilitation
Center :
Situated on a 17-acre campus
just minutes west of the main medical complex, the Kluge Children's
Rehabilitation Center has a 23 bed inpatient unit and operates 22
specialty outpatient clinics which receive approximately 10,000
outpatient visits annually. The center cares for children with a broad
range of disorders including muscular dystrophy, cerebral palsy,
myelomeningocele, scoliosis, and neurodevelopmental delay. It is
regionally and nationally recognized for its educational and
research programs. A sophisticated motion analysis laboratory is
located within the facility.
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