This curriculum vitae summarizes Erica Zelickowski's education and professional experience. She received her Doctor of Pharmacy degree from Roseman University of Health Sciences in 2009. Since then, she has worked as a pharmacist at various retail pharmacies and healthcare facilities. Her professional experience includes rotations in palliative care, institutional pharmacy, trauma surgery, general medicine, and community pharmacy with a focus on diabetes.
This document is a curriculum vitae for Dr. Shanea Parker that outlines her education and professional experience. She received her Doctor of Pharmacy degree from Hampton University in 2004 and has since held various pharmacy positions including manager, clinical pharmacist, and assistant professor. Her experience ranges from hospital, retail, and academic settings. She is licensed and certified in Virginia and maintains active involvement in professional organizations.
Handbook on Injectable Drugs, 18th Edition - ASHP
Author: American Society of Health-System Pharmacists - ASHP
Publisher: American Society of Health-System Pharmacists - ASHP
Anna Howard is a registered pharmacist in Oregon with a PharmD from the University of Montana. She has over 5 years of pharmacy experience including a PGY1 residency. Her experience includes positions in hospital, community, and ambulatory care pharmacy. She has extensive training in areas such as oncology, critical care, and infectious disease. She is licensed in Oregon, ACLS/BLS certified, and has received specialized training in areas like aseptic technique and immunizations.
2015 geriatric pharma chapter 1 fundamentals of geriatric pharmacotherapyROBERTO CARLOS NIZAMA
This document discusses the challenges of caring for the geriatric population. It begins by noting there is no universally agreed upon definition of "geriatric," as age alone is an imperfect measure. The elderly population can be stratified by age, health status, and living environment to better understand individual needs and how clinical evidence applies. Healthcare for the elderly involves many providers across different settings, from independent living to nursing homes. Close scrutiny of a patient's individual characteristics is needed to ensure care is optimally tailored and potential issues addressed.
The document discusses drug information centers (DICs), which provide unbiased drug information to healthcare professionals. DICs were first established in the 1960s and are usually located in major hospitals and health facilities. They are staffed by pharmacists with specialized training who locate, evaluate, and communicate drug information to answer questions from other healthcare providers. DICs aim to promote evidence-based practice and rational drug use through services like answering drug-related queries, publishing bulletins, and educating students.
This document outlines the curriculum for a Master in Clinical Pharmacy degree program in Zambia. It provides the program's vision, aims, objectives, structure and course descriptions. The curriculum was designed to train clinical pharmacists to address issues with traditional drug distribution systems like high rates of medication errors and adverse drug reactions. It incorporates courses in areas like pharmacotherapy, clinical skills, research methods and various medical specialties to prepare pharmacists for patient-centered practice focusing on pharmaceutical care.
This curriculum vitae summarizes Jillian Murphy's education and qualifications. She is currently a candidate for a Doctor of Pharmacy degree at the University of Colorado Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, and has a Bachelor of Science in Biomedical Science from SUNY Buffalo. Her experience includes internships at various pharmacies where she provided patient counseling and completed dispensing activities. She has also completed several advanced pharmacy practice experiences in different practice settings such as oncology, transplant, and community pharmacy.
Marina Khalabuda-Sagalovich is a licensed pharmacist with over 7 years of experience in hospital, long-term care, and retail settings. She has a PharmD degree and completed a PGY1 pharmacy residency. Her experience includes roles in academia, research, and publishing. She is licensed as a pharmacist in Illinois and New York.
This document is a curriculum vitae for Dr. Shanea Parker that outlines her education and professional experience. She received her Doctor of Pharmacy degree from Hampton University in 2004 and has since held various pharmacy positions including manager, clinical pharmacist, and assistant professor. Her experience ranges from hospital, retail, and academic settings. She is licensed and certified in Virginia and maintains active involvement in professional organizations.
Handbook on Injectable Drugs, 18th Edition - ASHP
Author: American Society of Health-System Pharmacists - ASHP
Publisher: American Society of Health-System Pharmacists - ASHP
Anna Howard is a registered pharmacist in Oregon with a PharmD from the University of Montana. She has over 5 years of pharmacy experience including a PGY1 residency. Her experience includes positions in hospital, community, and ambulatory care pharmacy. She has extensive training in areas such as oncology, critical care, and infectious disease. She is licensed in Oregon, ACLS/BLS certified, and has received specialized training in areas like aseptic technique and immunizations.
2015 geriatric pharma chapter 1 fundamentals of geriatric pharmacotherapyROBERTO CARLOS NIZAMA
This document discusses the challenges of caring for the geriatric population. It begins by noting there is no universally agreed upon definition of "geriatric," as age alone is an imperfect measure. The elderly population can be stratified by age, health status, and living environment to better understand individual needs and how clinical evidence applies. Healthcare for the elderly involves many providers across different settings, from independent living to nursing homes. Close scrutiny of a patient's individual characteristics is needed to ensure care is optimally tailored and potential issues addressed.
The document discusses drug information centers (DICs), which provide unbiased drug information to healthcare professionals. DICs were first established in the 1960s and are usually located in major hospitals and health facilities. They are staffed by pharmacists with specialized training who locate, evaluate, and communicate drug information to answer questions from other healthcare providers. DICs aim to promote evidence-based practice and rational drug use through services like answering drug-related queries, publishing bulletins, and educating students.
This document outlines the curriculum for a Master in Clinical Pharmacy degree program in Zambia. It provides the program's vision, aims, objectives, structure and course descriptions. The curriculum was designed to train clinical pharmacists to address issues with traditional drug distribution systems like high rates of medication errors and adverse drug reactions. It incorporates courses in areas like pharmacotherapy, clinical skills, research methods and various medical specialties to prepare pharmacists for patient-centered practice focusing on pharmaceutical care.
This curriculum vitae summarizes Jillian Murphy's education and qualifications. She is currently a candidate for a Doctor of Pharmacy degree at the University of Colorado Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, and has a Bachelor of Science in Biomedical Science from SUNY Buffalo. Her experience includes internships at various pharmacies where she provided patient counseling and completed dispensing activities. She has also completed several advanced pharmacy practice experiences in different practice settings such as oncology, transplant, and community pharmacy.
Marina Khalabuda-Sagalovich is a licensed pharmacist with over 7 years of experience in hospital, long-term care, and retail settings. She has a PharmD degree and completed a PGY1 pharmacy residency. Her experience includes roles in academia, research, and publishing. She is licensed as a pharmacist in Illinois and New York.
The document discusses the application of pharmacoinformatics and summarizes various drug information resources. It begins by outlining the history and purpose of drug information centers and services. It then describes different types of drug literature including tertiary, secondary, and primary sources. Several examples are provided for each type of literature along with their descriptions and considerations for evaluation. Common computer databases and other sources of drug information are also mentioned.
This document provides an overview of clinical drug information resources. It discusses drug nomenclature, sources for drug names, interaction and adverse reaction information, safety in pregnancy and lactation, and reporting adverse drug reactions. It also describes various personal digital assistant programs that can be used for quick drug reference and summarizes two studies that evaluated the performance of different PDA drug information sources.
Sample chapter - Competence Assessment Tools for Health-System PharmaciesROBERTO CARLOS NIZAMA
Antibiotic streamlining refers to changing patients from broad-spectrum antibiotics to narrower ones that specifically target the identified infecting organism. It involves monitoring culture results and the patient's clinical response to evaluate if therapy can be optimized. The benefits of streamlining include reducing resistance, adverse effects, costs, and secondary infections while improving outcomes. Pharmacists play an important role in streamlining by interpreting culture data and making recommendations to physicians.
Patients' Perceptions of Community Pharmacy Practice in UAE: An Overviewiosrphr_editor
The IOSR Journal of Pharmacy (IOSRPHR) is an open access online & offline peer reviewed international journal, which publishes innovative research papers, reviews, mini-reviews, short communications and notes dealing with Pharmaceutical Sciences( Pharmaceutical Technology, Pharmaceutics, Biopharmaceutics, Pharmacokinetics, Pharmaceutical/Medicinal Chemistry, Computational Chemistry and Molecular Drug Design, Pharmacognosy & Phytochemistry, Pharmacology, Pharmaceutical Analysis, Pharmacy Practice, Clinical and Hospital Pharmacy, Cell Biology, Genomics and Proteomics, Pharmacogenomics, Bioinformatics and Biotechnology of Pharmaceutical Interest........more details on Aim & Scope).
The first drug information center opened in 1962 at the University of Kentucky Medical Center. By 1973 there were 54 drug information centers in the United States. Drug information centers respond to inquiries about various drug-related topics like efficacy, interactions, dosage, and administration. The scope of their work focuses on ensuring the "five rights" of drug use - the right drug, dose, form, route and patient.
Atr implementar Implementation of the First Pharmacist Managed South Koreaaresto
This document summarizes the implementation of the first pharmacist-managed anticoagulation clinic in South Korea based on the U.S. model. There was initial resistance from physicians who doubted a pharmacist's ability to manage anticoagulation therapy. The pharmacist-run clinic showed improved anticoagulation control compared to usual care, with 82% of INRs in the therapeutic range versus 66% under usual care. Over 1500 patients have been enrolled in the clinic since its inception. The success of this first clinic has led to the development of additional pharmacist-managed anticoagulation services in South Korea.
- The document discusses a study that assessed the attitudes and behaviors of pharmacy professionals towards patient counseling in Awi Zone, North West Ethiopia.
- The study found that over half of respondents believed counseling is a shared responsibility between pharmacists and physicians. The main reason respondents cited for counseling was improved patient compliance.
- Lack of knowledge and confidence was the primary barrier preventing respondents from counseling patients more. Most respondents felt counseling promotes rational drug use.
Tertiary literature provides summarized information from primary sources for quick reference. It has advantages of being convenient and easy to use with well-established information, but limitations include potentially outdated information due to delays between original publication and summarization. Tertiary literature is best used for background information or quick answers, and should be evaluated based on author expertise, timeliness, and citation of appropriate sources.
Influence of medicare formulary restrictions on evidence based prescribing pr...TÀI LIỆU NGÀNH MAY
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tai lieu tong hop, thu vien luan van, luan van tong hop, do an chuyen nganh
The document outlines the steps that a poison information specialist should follow to properly handle a poison information query. The specialist must first collect details about the caller and exposure incident. They then assess the urgency of the situation and research treatment options using specialized databases and references. The specialist evaluates the information and provides a tailored response, either verbally or in writing. They may follow up on the case and document the interaction, maintaining confidentiality. The overall process ensures the specialist can safely and effectively assist those exposed to toxic substances.
Greta Rabinovich is a licensed pharmacist in New Jersey with over 4 years of experience working in community pharmacies. She has a Doctor of Pharmacy degree from Long Island University. Her experience includes dispensing medications, counseling patients, and interacting with healthcare providers. She is committed to improving patient health and wellness through her work.
The document lists and describes various drug information resources available at hospitals and through library subscriptions, including Micromedex, Facts & Comparisons, MDConsult, AccessMedicine, DynaMed, StatRef, Goodman & Gilman’s Basic & Clinical Pharmacology, Poisoning and Drug Overdose, and AHFS DI Essentials. It also outlines free internet resources such as the NLM Drug Portal, RxList, Drugs.com, Epocrates Online, and the Johns Hopkins Antibiotic Guide. PDA resources mentioned include Epocrates, MicroMedex/Thomson Clinical Xpert, Tarascon, and Lexi-Drugs.
This document is a resume for Lauren Melina Kuta, who is a PharmD candidate at Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine. The 3 sentence summary is:
Lauren is seeking a career in pharmacy where she can help patients achieve optimal health. She has a strong educational background including a Bachelor's in Biological Sciences and is currently pursuing her Doctorate of Pharmacy. Lauren has extensive pharmacy work and research experience including positions at multiple pharmacies and hospitals during her clinical rotations.
Rational prescribing,dispensing and use of drugsAhmad Ali
The document discusses rational drug use and dispensing. It defines rational drug use as using the right drug for the right patient in the right dose at the right time through the right route while ensuring cost-effectiveness. Rational dispensing involves accurately interpreting prescriptions, checking for errors, precisely filling medications, properly labeling containers with instructions, and educating patients. The key steps in rational dispensing are receiving prescriptions, interpreting instructions, checking drugs, filling accurately, labeling clearly, and providing instructions to patients.
The document discusses quality improvement in healthcare. It states that improving quality can reduce costs by better managing care processes. Quality healthcare should be safe, effective, patient-centered, timely, efficient and equitable. There are various outcomes of clinical processes including physical outcomes like complications, service outcomes like patient satisfaction, and cost outcomes. Variation exists in clinical practice due to factors like complexity, lack of knowledge, and human error. Clinical standards help address variation through approaches like peer review and assessing practitioner competence.
Co-Chairs Laura S. Wood, RN, MSN, OCN, and Sumanta Kumar Pal, MD, and presenter Kathleen Burns, RN, MSN, AGACNP-BC, OCN, prepared useful Practice Aids pertaining to renal cell carcinoma for this CME/MOC/NCPD/ILNA activity titled “The New Therapeutic Era in Renal Cell Carcinoma: Essentials for Team-Based Patient Care.” For the full presentation, downloadable Practice Aids, complete CME/MOC/NCPD/ILNA information, and details on applying for credit, please visit us at https://bit.ly/30jWypm. CME/MOC/NCPD/ILNA credit will be available until May 16, 2022.
The document provides a history and overview of poison control centers and their organization and operations. It discusses how the first poison control centers were established in the 1930s-1980s and key roles of pharmacists. The goals of poison control centers are to provide comprehensive, accurate and timely information to clients and enhance medical care of patients. It outlines the typical personnel, resources, equipment, policies and procedures needed to organize and run an effective poison control center.
Botanical medicine _from_bench_to_bedsideZainab&Sons
This book provides an overview of conducting research on botanical medicines from pre-clinical studies to clinical trials. It discusses challenges in researching herbal products, including ensuring product quality and understanding pharmacology. The book aims to facilitate high-quality research on botanicals by presenting perspectives from academics and industry experts. It emphasizes the need for scientific studies to build an evidence base for the safety and effectiveness of herbal products.
This document contains the resume of Lauren Melina Kuta, who is a PharmD candidate at Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine. Her objective is to help patients achieve wellness through advocating for pharmacy and providing excellent customer service. She has extensive pharmacy work and research experience, including positions at Osco pharmacy and Northwestern Memorial Hospital. She also has a background in the military as a cryptologist in the Navy.
This document is a resume for Hang N. Truong-McDaniel, a licensed pharmacist. It includes her contact information, education history, training and certifications, licensure, professional experience, and clerkship experiences. Her professional experience includes working as a pharmacist at Select Specialty Hospital since 2015 and as a pharmacy intern at Select Specialty Hospital from 2005 to 2015. She has a Doctor of Pharmacy degree from the University of Missouri-Kansas City and a Master of Business Administration degree from the same institution.
Nicole Russo has extensive experience as a clinical pharmacist. She received her Doctor of Pharmacy from Northeastern University in 2014 and is licensed in New York. Her experience includes positions at Magellan Health, Stop & Shop Pharmacy, and Brigham and Women's Hospital. She has specialized training and certifications in immunizations, CPR, and protecting human research participants.
Zachary Michaud has over 15 years of experience as a licensed pharmacist in Oregon. He currently works as a relief pharmacist for various pharmacy chains. Previously, he was a pharmacist and preceptor for Target/CVS Pharmacy for 10 years. He earned his Doctor of Pharmacy degree from the University of Rhode Island in 2006. His academic rotations included community clinics and VA hospitals, focusing on medication management.
The document discusses the application of pharmacoinformatics and summarizes various drug information resources. It begins by outlining the history and purpose of drug information centers and services. It then describes different types of drug literature including tertiary, secondary, and primary sources. Several examples are provided for each type of literature along with their descriptions and considerations for evaluation. Common computer databases and other sources of drug information are also mentioned.
This document provides an overview of clinical drug information resources. It discusses drug nomenclature, sources for drug names, interaction and adverse reaction information, safety in pregnancy and lactation, and reporting adverse drug reactions. It also describes various personal digital assistant programs that can be used for quick drug reference and summarizes two studies that evaluated the performance of different PDA drug information sources.
Sample chapter - Competence Assessment Tools for Health-System PharmaciesROBERTO CARLOS NIZAMA
Antibiotic streamlining refers to changing patients from broad-spectrum antibiotics to narrower ones that specifically target the identified infecting organism. It involves monitoring culture results and the patient's clinical response to evaluate if therapy can be optimized. The benefits of streamlining include reducing resistance, adverse effects, costs, and secondary infections while improving outcomes. Pharmacists play an important role in streamlining by interpreting culture data and making recommendations to physicians.
Patients' Perceptions of Community Pharmacy Practice in UAE: An Overviewiosrphr_editor
The IOSR Journal of Pharmacy (IOSRPHR) is an open access online & offline peer reviewed international journal, which publishes innovative research papers, reviews, mini-reviews, short communications and notes dealing with Pharmaceutical Sciences( Pharmaceutical Technology, Pharmaceutics, Biopharmaceutics, Pharmacokinetics, Pharmaceutical/Medicinal Chemistry, Computational Chemistry and Molecular Drug Design, Pharmacognosy & Phytochemistry, Pharmacology, Pharmaceutical Analysis, Pharmacy Practice, Clinical and Hospital Pharmacy, Cell Biology, Genomics and Proteomics, Pharmacogenomics, Bioinformatics and Biotechnology of Pharmaceutical Interest........more details on Aim & Scope).
The first drug information center opened in 1962 at the University of Kentucky Medical Center. By 1973 there were 54 drug information centers in the United States. Drug information centers respond to inquiries about various drug-related topics like efficacy, interactions, dosage, and administration. The scope of their work focuses on ensuring the "five rights" of drug use - the right drug, dose, form, route and patient.
Atr implementar Implementation of the First Pharmacist Managed South Koreaaresto
This document summarizes the implementation of the first pharmacist-managed anticoagulation clinic in South Korea based on the U.S. model. There was initial resistance from physicians who doubted a pharmacist's ability to manage anticoagulation therapy. The pharmacist-run clinic showed improved anticoagulation control compared to usual care, with 82% of INRs in the therapeutic range versus 66% under usual care. Over 1500 patients have been enrolled in the clinic since its inception. The success of this first clinic has led to the development of additional pharmacist-managed anticoagulation services in South Korea.
- The document discusses a study that assessed the attitudes and behaviors of pharmacy professionals towards patient counseling in Awi Zone, North West Ethiopia.
- The study found that over half of respondents believed counseling is a shared responsibility between pharmacists and physicians. The main reason respondents cited for counseling was improved patient compliance.
- Lack of knowledge and confidence was the primary barrier preventing respondents from counseling patients more. Most respondents felt counseling promotes rational drug use.
Tertiary literature provides summarized information from primary sources for quick reference. It has advantages of being convenient and easy to use with well-established information, but limitations include potentially outdated information due to delays between original publication and summarization. Tertiary literature is best used for background information or quick answers, and should be evaluated based on author expertise, timeliness, and citation of appropriate sources.
Influence of medicare formulary restrictions on evidence based prescribing pr...TÀI LIỆU NGÀNH MAY
Để xem full tài liệu Xin vui long liên hệ page để được hỗ trợ
: https://www.facebook.com/thuvienluanvan01
HOẶC
https://www.facebook.com/garmentspace/
https://www.facebook.com/thuvienluanvan01
https://www.facebook.com/thuvienluanvan01
tai lieu tong hop, thu vien luan van, luan van tong hop, do an chuyen nganh
The document outlines the steps that a poison information specialist should follow to properly handle a poison information query. The specialist must first collect details about the caller and exposure incident. They then assess the urgency of the situation and research treatment options using specialized databases and references. The specialist evaluates the information and provides a tailored response, either verbally or in writing. They may follow up on the case and document the interaction, maintaining confidentiality. The overall process ensures the specialist can safely and effectively assist those exposed to toxic substances.
Greta Rabinovich is a licensed pharmacist in New Jersey with over 4 years of experience working in community pharmacies. She has a Doctor of Pharmacy degree from Long Island University. Her experience includes dispensing medications, counseling patients, and interacting with healthcare providers. She is committed to improving patient health and wellness through her work.
The document lists and describes various drug information resources available at hospitals and through library subscriptions, including Micromedex, Facts & Comparisons, MDConsult, AccessMedicine, DynaMed, StatRef, Goodman & Gilman’s Basic & Clinical Pharmacology, Poisoning and Drug Overdose, and AHFS DI Essentials. It also outlines free internet resources such as the NLM Drug Portal, RxList, Drugs.com, Epocrates Online, and the Johns Hopkins Antibiotic Guide. PDA resources mentioned include Epocrates, MicroMedex/Thomson Clinical Xpert, Tarascon, and Lexi-Drugs.
This document is a resume for Lauren Melina Kuta, who is a PharmD candidate at Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine. The 3 sentence summary is:
Lauren is seeking a career in pharmacy where she can help patients achieve optimal health. She has a strong educational background including a Bachelor's in Biological Sciences and is currently pursuing her Doctorate of Pharmacy. Lauren has extensive pharmacy work and research experience including positions at multiple pharmacies and hospitals during her clinical rotations.
Rational prescribing,dispensing and use of drugsAhmad Ali
The document discusses rational drug use and dispensing. It defines rational drug use as using the right drug for the right patient in the right dose at the right time through the right route while ensuring cost-effectiveness. Rational dispensing involves accurately interpreting prescriptions, checking for errors, precisely filling medications, properly labeling containers with instructions, and educating patients. The key steps in rational dispensing are receiving prescriptions, interpreting instructions, checking drugs, filling accurately, labeling clearly, and providing instructions to patients.
The document discusses quality improvement in healthcare. It states that improving quality can reduce costs by better managing care processes. Quality healthcare should be safe, effective, patient-centered, timely, efficient and equitable. There are various outcomes of clinical processes including physical outcomes like complications, service outcomes like patient satisfaction, and cost outcomes. Variation exists in clinical practice due to factors like complexity, lack of knowledge, and human error. Clinical standards help address variation through approaches like peer review and assessing practitioner competence.
Co-Chairs Laura S. Wood, RN, MSN, OCN, and Sumanta Kumar Pal, MD, and presenter Kathleen Burns, RN, MSN, AGACNP-BC, OCN, prepared useful Practice Aids pertaining to renal cell carcinoma for this CME/MOC/NCPD/ILNA activity titled “The New Therapeutic Era in Renal Cell Carcinoma: Essentials for Team-Based Patient Care.” For the full presentation, downloadable Practice Aids, complete CME/MOC/NCPD/ILNA information, and details on applying for credit, please visit us at https://bit.ly/30jWypm. CME/MOC/NCPD/ILNA credit will be available until May 16, 2022.
The document provides a history and overview of poison control centers and their organization and operations. It discusses how the first poison control centers were established in the 1930s-1980s and key roles of pharmacists. The goals of poison control centers are to provide comprehensive, accurate and timely information to clients and enhance medical care of patients. It outlines the typical personnel, resources, equipment, policies and procedures needed to organize and run an effective poison control center.
Botanical medicine _from_bench_to_bedsideZainab&Sons
This book provides an overview of conducting research on botanical medicines from pre-clinical studies to clinical trials. It discusses challenges in researching herbal products, including ensuring product quality and understanding pharmacology. The book aims to facilitate high-quality research on botanicals by presenting perspectives from academics and industry experts. It emphasizes the need for scientific studies to build an evidence base for the safety and effectiveness of herbal products.
This document contains the resume of Lauren Melina Kuta, who is a PharmD candidate at Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine. Her objective is to help patients achieve wellness through advocating for pharmacy and providing excellent customer service. She has extensive pharmacy work and research experience, including positions at Osco pharmacy and Northwestern Memorial Hospital. She also has a background in the military as a cryptologist in the Navy.
This document is a resume for Hang N. Truong-McDaniel, a licensed pharmacist. It includes her contact information, education history, training and certifications, licensure, professional experience, and clerkship experiences. Her professional experience includes working as a pharmacist at Select Specialty Hospital since 2015 and as a pharmacy intern at Select Specialty Hospital from 2005 to 2015. She has a Doctor of Pharmacy degree from the University of Missouri-Kansas City and a Master of Business Administration degree from the same institution.
Nicole Russo has extensive experience as a clinical pharmacist. She received her Doctor of Pharmacy from Northeastern University in 2014 and is licensed in New York. Her experience includes positions at Magellan Health, Stop & Shop Pharmacy, and Brigham and Women's Hospital. She has specialized training and certifications in immunizations, CPR, and protecting human research participants.
Zachary Michaud has over 15 years of experience as a licensed pharmacist in Oregon. He currently works as a relief pharmacist for various pharmacy chains. Previously, he was a pharmacist and preceptor for Target/CVS Pharmacy for 10 years. He earned his Doctor of Pharmacy degree from the University of Rhode Island in 2006. His academic rotations included community clinics and VA hospitals, focusing on medication management.
Oscar Kwan is an experienced pharmacist with over 3 years of retail pharmacy experience. He has interned at Pfizer where he analyzed safety reports and regulatory documents. Kwan received his PharmD from St. John's University with a GPA of 3.77. He is proficient in medical writing, data analysis, and using technology to communicate health information.
Brian Seders has experience as a pharmacy intern and graduate intern at The Charitable Pharmacy of Central OH from 2011-2015. He earned his Doctor of Pharmacy degree from the University of Cincinnati in 2015. His experience includes clinical rotations in various settings such as hospitals, clinics, and charitable pharmacies. He has a pharmacist license in Ohio and certifications in MTM, immunizations, and CPR. His objective is to provide patient care with strong interpersonal skills in a clinical setting.
Christi R. Lanphier has over 15 years of experience in nursing and healthcare. She received her Bachelor's degree in Nursing from Georgia Baptist College of Nursing in 2006. She is currently a Clinical Manager at Northwest Georgia Oncology where she oversees communication between physicians and staff, schedules staff, and leads meetings. Prior to her manager role, she worked as an Infusion Nurse at Northwest Georgia Oncology and in pediatric clinics.
This curriculum vitae summarizes the education and experience of Nicolas P. DiTommaso. He received his Pharm. D. from MCPHS University in 2016 and is licensed to practice pharmacy in Massachusetts. His clinical experience includes rotations in community pharmacy, long-term care, hospital, and ambulatory care settings. He has additional training in herbal medicine, immunization delivery, and business management. DiTommaso is an active member of professional pharmacy organizations and has presented research at his university and hospitals.
Wesley Porter is a pharmacy intern and Pharm.D. candidate at the University of Colorado Skaggs School of Pharmacy with extensive pharmacy experience including community, hospital, and ambulatory care settings. He has a strong record of academic achievement, leadership, professional development, and community service. His career goal is to become an ambulatory care clinical pharmacist.
Jimmy J. Lin is a Doctor of Pharmacy candidate at California Northstate University College of Pharmacy graduating in May 2016. He has worked in various pharmacy settings including hospital, retail, long-term care, and academia. His experience includes monitoring medications, providing clinical consultation, counseling patients, and teaching pharmacy students. He is licensed as a pharmacy intern in California and volunteers regularly at health fairs providing immunizations and health screenings to the community.
The document is Erica Wilson's curriculum vitae. It summarizes her education, including a Doctor of Pharmacy degree from Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center School of Pharmacy, residency training, certifications, professional experience including her current PGY1 residency, awards and memberships in professional organizations.
This document is a resume for Taylor Alane Roberson that outlines her education and professional experience. She is currently pursuing a Doctor of Pharmacy degree from Ohio Northern University with anticipated graduation in May 2015. She has gained pharmacy experience through internships at various hospitals and as a medical writer. Her advanced pharmacy practice experiences included rotations in general medicine, cardiology, infectious disease, hospital pharmacy, ambulatory care, and emergency medicine at hospitals across Ohio.
Amy Hutchison's resume summarizes her education and experience. She received a Doctor of Pharmacy degree from McWhorter School of Pharmacy at Samford University in 2015. She has over 5 years of experience in various pharmacy settings including community pharmacies, hospitals, and nursing homes. Her resume lists her licenses, certifications, and advanced pharmacy practice experiences such as general medicine, psychiatric pharmacy, and ambulatory care.
Gina Benson has over 20 years of experience as a pharmacy manager at Rite Aid Corporation, where she oversees daily operations and a staff. She has a Doctor of Pharmacy degree from Campbell University and bachelor's degrees from Virginia Tech. Her background also includes clinical clerkships and positions at the National Institutes of Health, FDA, and VA Medical Center focused on pharmacy technician work, clinical trials, and analytical chemistry.
Elizabeth Welch is a licensed pharmacist with over 30 years of experience in various pharmacy settings including retail pharmacies, hospitals, and home infusion. She currently works as a staff pharmacist at CVS and Anne Arundel Medical Center Employee Pharmacy, where her responsibilities include inventory management, customer service, prescription compounding, and immunizations. She has extensive experience developing policies and procedures, evaluating patient medication profiles, and ensuring compliance with various healthcare standards.
This document is a resume for Amanda Luciano. It summarizes her education, licenses, employment history, clinical experiences and presentations. She received her Doctor of Pharmacy degree from Rutgers University in 2014. Her current role is Associate Medical Director at GSW Worldwide in Columbus, Ohio, where she provides clinical and strategic input for medical projects. She has over 5 years of pharmacy experience in both hospital and retail settings.
This document is a resume for Nouran M. Salem, PharmD, MBA. It summarizes her education, including obtaining a Doctor of Pharmacy degree and Masters in Business Administration with a healthcare focus. It also outlines her professional experience, which includes two post-graduate pharmacy residencies in critical care pharmacy at Beaumont Hospital - Royal Oak, as well as pharmacy intern experience. The resume provides details of her licenses, certifications, and clinical training rotations during her post-graduate residencies.
systematic approach in answering Drug queries.pptxDrpradeepthi
1) The document outlines the steps in a systematic approach to answering drug information queries. This involves gathering background information on the requestor and patient, categorizing the question, developing a search strategy, evaluating the data found, and formulating a response.
2) Key steps include determining the requestor's profession and patient details if applicable, selecting relevant references based on the question category, prioritizing sources by likelihood of containing the answer, and critically analyzing findings in the context of the inquiry.
3) The goal is to efficiently provide an accurate, unbiased response by following a standardized process for clarifying the request, searching appropriately for the answer, and synthesizing the data.
Clinical pharmacy may be defined as the science and practice of rationale use of
medications, where the pharmacists are more oriented towards the patient care
rationalizing medication therapy promoting health , wellness of people.
It is the modern and extended field of pharmacy.
“ The discipline that embodies the application and development (by pharmacist) of
scientific principles of pharmacology, toxicology, therapeutics, and clinical pharmacokinetics, pharmacoeconomics, pharmacogenomics and other allied
sciences for the care of patients”.
This document provides biographical and professional information about Richard L. McKnight, Pharm.D. It includes his contact information, education history, professional experience since 1999 as a critical care clinical specialist at West Virginia University Hospitals, publications, presentations, and committee/protocol work primarily related to critical care pharmacy.
1. 1
Zelickowski:
Curriculum
Vitae
CIRRICULUM
VITAE
Erica
Zelickowski,
PharmD
690
S
Clearwater
Ln
303,
Boise,
ID
83712
ezelick09@gmail.com
208.968.6019
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
EDUCATION
Doctor
of
Pharmacy
Roseman
University
of
Health
Sciences
Degree
awarded
June
2009
Pre-‐Pharmacy
Cirriculum
College
of
Southern
Nevada
(CSN)
University
of
Nevada
Las
Vegas
(UNLV)
PROFESSIONAL
EXPERIENCE
Albertsons
LLC
Savon
Pharmacy
–
Pharmacist
–
19
locations
January
2013
-‐
present
Walmart
Pharmacy
–
Pharmacist,
Pharmacy
Manager
–
3
locations
October
2010
–
April
2012
Walgreens
Pharmacy
-‐
Pharmacist
–
49
locations
July
2009
–
June
2010
PHARMACY
PRACTICE
ROTATIONS
AND
ELECTIVES
Palliative
Care/Pain
Management
Nathan
Adelson
Hospice,
Las
Vegas,
Nevada
Preceptor:
Justin
Kulgren,
PharmD
April
2009
–
May
2009
Activities
included
daily
rounds
with
attending
physicians
at
the
in-‐patient
care
units
(IPU),
represented
pharmacy
in
weekly
multidisciplinary
home
care
and
(IPU)
team
meetings,
participated
in
monitoring
pain
management
regimens
and
end-‐of-‐life
care,
bi-‐weekly
presentations
to
preceptor
and
other
hospice
staff.
Topic
discussion
included:
Pain,
Pain
Management,
Treating
Refractory
Pain,
Opioid
Conversions,
End-‐of
Life
Care,
Recognition
of
Imminent
Death,
Palliative
Medicine,
Cystic
Fibrosis,
Parkinson's
Disease,
Medicare
Guidelines
for
Hospice
Admissions.
2. 2
Zelickowski:
Curriculum
Vitae
Advanced
Pharmacy
Practice
Experience
–
Institutional
HealthSouth
Rehabilitation
Hospital,
Las
Vegas,
Nevada
Preceptor:
Steve
Lapping,
RPh
Februrary
2009
–
March
2009
Activities
included
daily
sterile
compounding
of
IV
drugs
(minus
chemotherapy
and
TPN),
daily
restocking
of
AcuDose-‐Rx
medication
stations,
inventory
management,
daily
Cardinal
order,
vancomycin/aminoglycoside
monitoring
and
dosing,
Procrit/Aranesp
monitoring,
anticoagulation
monitoring,
weekly
multidisciplinary
team
meetings
for
in-‐patient
evaluations.
Topic
discussions
included:
DVT
Treatment
and
Prophylaxis,
Professionalism,
Admissions
Evaluations
for
In-‐
patient
Rehabilitation,
USP
<797>,
JAHCO
2009
Patient
Safety
Goals,
Erythropoietin:
Indications
and
Laboratory
Monitoring,
and
Daptomycin.
Trauma
Surgery
University
Medical
Center,
Las
Vegas,
Nevada
Preceptor:
Don
Frisch,
PharmD
January
2009
-‐
February
2009
Activities
included
daily
rounds
with
trauma
team
in
Level
1
Trauma
Unit
and
burn
center,
following
patients
in
trauma
unit,
antibiotic
monitoring,
attending
lectures
and
topic
discussions
with
medical
students
lead
by
attending
physicians
and
fellows,
attending
rounds
with
infectious
disease
doctor,
attending
lectures
at
on-‐site
faculty
offices,
and
pain
consult
with
pharmacy
resident.
Topic
discussions
included:
Sepsis
Guidelines,
Xigris
Criteria,
Mechanical
Ventilation,
Traumatic
Brain
Injury,
Spinal
Cord
Injuries,
Anemia,
Delirium
verses
Agitation,
Considerations
in
Pain
Management
and
Sedation,
Neuromuscular
Blockers,
DVT
Prophylaxis,
Glascow
Coma
Scale
(GCS),
Managing
Intracranial
Pressure,
Stress
Ulcer
Prophylaxis,
Phenytoin/Fosphenytoin
Dosing,
Glycemic
Control,
and
Shock.
General
Medicine
North
Vista
Hospital,
Las
Vegas,
Nevada
Preceptor:
Todd
Barnard,
PharmD
November
2008
-‐
December
2008
Activities
included
pharmacokinetic
antibiotic
dosing,
anticoagulation
monitoring,
rounds
with
ICU
charge
nurse
and
case
manager,
rounds
with
infectious
disease
doctor,
researching
and
answering
drug
information
questions
for
non-‐pharmacy
practitioners,
gathering
MUE
information
for
director
of
pharmacy,
monitoring
labs
for
infectious
disease
doctor,
and
observation
of
order
entry.
Advanced
Community
Practice
-‐
Diabetes
Focus
CVS
Pharmacy,
Las
Vegas,
Nevada
3. 3
Zelickowski:
Curriculum
Vitae
Preceptor:
Mike
Martinez,
PharmD
September
2008
-‐
November
2008
Activities
included
patient
counseling
and
preparing
for
weekly
topic
discussions
with
preceptor.
Presentation
topics
included
Diabetes
Overview,
Profile
Management
and
Interventions,
OTC
Diabetic
Products,
Herbal
and
Dietary
Supplements:
Considerations
in
Diabetics,
and
one
demonstrative
presentation
involving
a
diabetic
monitor.
Other
rotation
specific
activities
were
related
to
pharmacy
management
and
included
inventory
management,
inventory
audits,
evaluation
of
various
pharmacy
reports,
workflow
management
as
well
as
participating
in
daily
pharmacy
activities.
Internal
Medicine
Meadows
Medical
Group,
Las
Vegas,
Nevada
Preceptor:
Mehrdad
Tafreshi,
MD
August
2008
-‐
September
2008
Rotation
specific
experiences
included
screening
patients
for
medical
needs,
educating
patients
about
disease
states,
and
reviewing
patient
charts
with
preceptor
for
the
purpose
of
diagnosis,
disease
state
management
and
recommending
drug
therapy.
Complimentary
Medicine
University
of
Southern
Nevada,
College
of
Pharmacy,
Henderson,
Nevada
Instructor:
Charles
Lacy,
PharmD,
FCSHP
May
2008
-‐
June
2008
Elective
focused
on
evaluating
the
role
of
drug
and
non-‐drug
complementary
medicine
in
the
American
healthcare
system
while
offering
comparison
to
the
role
of
such
therapies
in
other
areas
of
the
world.
Other
objectives
included
comparing
and
contrasting
allopathic
medicine,
homeopathy,
osteopathy
and
naturopathy
as
well
as
critically
assessing
peer-‐reviewed
publications
examining
the
role
of
the
aforementioned
therapies
in
Western
medicine.
Community
Pharmacy
Practice
Experience
Walmart
Pharmacy,
Las
Vegas,
Nevada
Preceptor:
Tadu
Maryam,
PharmD
September
2007
-‐
May
2008
Community
Pharmacy
Practice
Experience
Target
Pharmacy,
Las
Vegas,
Nevada
Preceptor:
Justin
Holt,
RPh
June
2007
-‐
July
2007
4. 4
Zelickowski:
Curriculum
Vitae
Early
Pharmacy
Practice
Experience
Rite-‐Aide
Pharmacy,
Las
Vegas,
Nevada
Preceptor:
Joe
Monchunski,
RPh
Sept
2006
-‐
May
2007
GRANT
WRITING
“Educating
Adolescents
about
the
Consequences
Related
to
Non-‐Medical
Use
of
Prescription
and
Over-‐The-‐Counter
Medications”
Collaborating
Investigator
Other
Collaborating
Investigators:
Paul
Oesterman,
PharmD,
Rene
Coffman,
BS
PharmD,
PhD,
and
Immanuel
Ijo,
PharmD
Candidate
2009
Primary
Investigator:
Allison
Welder,
PhD
May
2008
–
June2008
Designed
a
survey
study
to
be
conducted
in
the
Clark
County
School
District
(CCSD)
regarding
non-‐medical
use
of
prescription
and
over-‐the-‐counter
drugs,
co-‐authored
an
intramural
grant
request
to
fund
the
project,
assisted
in
obtaining
approval
from
CCSD
Institutional
Review
Board
(IRB)
and
USN
IRB
to
conduct
the
survey,
contracted
with
the
University
of
Nevada
Las
Vegas
(UNLV)
Canon
Survey
Center
to
design
the
survey
tool
and
organize
descriptive
results.
Funded:
$8050.00
CERTIFICATES
&
LICENSES
Idaho
Pharmacist
License:
P6766
January
2013
-‐
present
Idaho
Controlled
Substances
License:
January
2013
-‐
present
Nevada
Pharmacist
License:
17649
August
2009
-‐
present
Protecting
Human
Research
Participants
National
Institute
of
Health
Office
of
Extramural
Research
Certificate
Number:
97273
September
2008
-‐
present
Delivering
Medication
Therapy
Management
Services
American
Pharmacists
Association
(APhA)
March
2014
-‐
present
Pharmacy
Based
Immunization
Delivery
5. 5
Zelickowski:
Curriculum
Vitae
American
Pharmacist
Association
(APhA)
August
2007
-‐
present
Basic
Life
Support
Provider
/
Blood
Borne
Pathogens
Cetificate
August
2007
-‐
present
Nevada
Pharmacy
Intern
License:
IN02021
September
2006
-‐
July
2009
PROFESSIONAL
MEMBERSHIPS
American
Pharmacist
Association
Sept
2007
-‐
Sept
2009
February
2014
-‐
present
American
Public
Health
Association
February
2014
-‐
present
Phi
Lambda
Sigma,
Beta
Omega
Chapter
(PLS)
June
2008
-‐
present
Roseman’s
Drug
Abuse
Awareness
Team
(DAAT)
December
2006
-‐
present
American
College
of
Clinical
Pharmacy
(ACCP)
October
2009
-‐
September
2010
Nevada
Society
of
Health
System
Pharmacists
(NVSHP)
June
2008
-‐
May
2009
American
Society
of
Health
System
Pharmacists
(ASHP)
September
2007
-‐
August
2009
National
Community
Pharmacist
Association
(NCPA)
September
2006
-‐
August
2007
LEADERSHIP
EXPERIENCE
Co-‐founder
of
Roseman
University’s
Drug
Abuse
Awareness
Team
December
2006
-‐
present
University
of
Southern
Nevada
College
of
Pharmacy
Curriculum
Committee
June
2008
-‐
June
2009
September
2006
-‐
September
2007
ACCP
-‐
Student
Network
Campus
Founding
Committee
6. 6
Zelickowski:
Curriculum
Vitae
March
2007
-‐
May
2007
PRESENTATIONS
“Educating
Youth
about
the
Consequences
of
Drug
Misuse
and
Abuse”
Several
short
group
presentations
to
teens,
parents,
teachers,
CCSD
administrators
and
detectives
over
the
coarse
of
3
years.
“Drug
Abuse
Awareness
Team:
Educating
Middle
School
Students
about
Medication
Misuse”
Poster
presentation
at
the
2008
United
States
Public
Health
Service
Scientific
and
Training
Symposium,
Tucson,
Arizona
June
9,
2008
“Simvastatin:
Potential
Treatment
for
Hyperandrogenism
in
Polycystic
Ovarian
Syndrome”
Presented
to
faculty
and
students,
USN
College
of
Pharmacy,
Henderson,
NV
May
15,
2008
“Substance
Abuse
Trends
and
Warning
Signs”
Presented
to
Clark
County
School
District
Teachers,
co-‐
presentation
with
Las
Vegas
Narcotic
Detectives;
New
Teachers
Conference,
Las
Vegas,
Nevada
May
3,
2008
“Overview
of
Levofloxacin
to
Prevent
Bacterial
Infection
in
Patients
with
Cancer
and
Neutropenia
by
Bucaneve
et
al”
Presented
to
faculty
and
students,
Journal
Club
presentation,
USN
College
of
Pharmacy,
Henderson,
Nevada
February
2008
“Diabetic
Monitors:
Information
for
the
Public”
Poster
presented
to
faculty
and
students,
USN
College
of
Pharmacy,
Henderson,
Nevada
April
2007
“Anthrax:
CDC
Category
A
Potential
Weapon
of
Mass
Destruction”
Presented
to
faculty
and
students,
USN
College
of
Pharmacy,
Henderson,
Nevada
February
2007
“Congestive
Heart
Failure:
Information
for
the
Public”
Poster
presented
to
faculty
and
students,
USN
College
of
Pharmacy,
Henderson,
Nevada
December
2006
“Traimterene/hydrochlorothiazide
Therapy”
Presented
to
faculty
and
students,
USN
College
of
Pharmacy,
Henderson,
Nevada
October
2006
7. 7
Zelickowski:
Curriculum
Vitae
NEWSLETTER
PUBLICATIONS
Zelickowski
E.
Pharmacy
Student
Corner
–
Spotlight
on
Drug
Abuse
Awareness
Team.
NVSHP
News.
June
2008;
Vol
2;
Issue
2:
pg
3
Zelickowski
E.
DAAT:
Recognition
and
Continued
Progress.
DAAT
Newsletter.
June
2008;
Vol
2;
Issue
1_Supplement:
pg
1-‐4
Zelickowski
E,
Welder
A,
Ijo
I,
Oesterman
P,
Riccio
K,
Armino
S,
Masters
B.
DAAT
1
Year
Anniversary:
Looking
Forward,
Looking
Back.
DAAT
Newsletter.
May
2008
Volume
2;
Issue
1:
pg
1-‐18
Zelickowski
E.
How
was
DAAT
born?
DAAT
Newsletter.
April
2007;
Vol
1;
Issue
1:
pg
2
COMMUNITY
SERVICE
Roseman
University’s
Drug
Abuse
Awareness
Team
(DAAT)
December
2006
-‐
June
2009
• Coordinated
presentations
at
several
Clark
County
School
District
(CCSD)
middle
schools,
high
schools
and
community
events
• collaborated
with
Clark
County
narcotics
detectives
on
several
presentations
to
students
and
teachers
• worked
with
CCSD
administrators
in
obtaining
approval
for
the
USN-‐DAAT
survey
study
aimed
at
determining
the
prevalence
of
non-‐medicl
use
of
prescription
drugs
among
8th
grade
students
in
the
Clark
County
School
District,
and
evaluating
the
efficacy
of
extended
RX
and
OTC
drug
education
Las
Vegas
Annual
Women’s
Expo
February
2008
• Educated
attendees
about
Genital
Human
Papilloma
Virus
• Promoted
prevention
of
cervical
cancer
and
genital
warts
via
vaccination
with
Gardasil
AWARDS
&
RECOGNITIONS
ASHP
Clinical
Skills
Competition
Campus
First
Runner-‐up
October
2008
Phil
Lambda
Sigma
Pharmacy
Leadership
Society
-‐
Invited
for
Membership
June
2008
Walgreens
Outstanding
Customer
Service
March/April
2008
American
Association
of
Colleges
of
Pharmacy
publication:
USN
students
work
to
reduce
teen
drug
abuse.
Academic
Pharmacy
Now.
2008;
Vol
1;
Issue
2:
page
12.
“2008
Profiles
in
Courage”
Recognized
in
Las
Vegas
Review
Journal
January
2008
8. 8
Zelickowski:
Curriculum
Vitae
ASHP
Clinical
Skills
Competition
Chapter
Top
10
Finalist
October
2007
USN
Scholarship
Recipient
August
2007
United
States
Public
Health
Service
Commissioned
Officers
Association
publication:
Hope
renewed
for
public
health
pharmacy.
COA
Frontline.
2007;
Vol
44;
Issue
6:
page
4.
University
of
Southern
Nevada
publication:
Drug
Abuse
Awareness
Team.
Connections.
2007;
Vol
2;
Issue
2:
page
10.
United
States
Public
Health
Service
Award:
“Excellence
in
Public
Health
Pharmacy
Practice”
May
2007
REFERENCES:
Avaliable
upon
request