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.
Stacey English is a Doctor of Pharmacy candidate at UNC-Chapel Hill with anticipated graduation in May 2015. She has work experience as a pharmacy intern at Kroger Pharmacy and Chapel Hill Compounding. Her advanced pharmacy practice experiences include rotations in ambulatory care, pediatrics, hospital settings, and pharmacy informatics. She is a member of professional organizations and has presented on various pharmacy topics.
Michael F. Akers is a pharmacy resident at Duluth Clinic in Duluth, Minnesota. He received his Doctor of Pharmacy from the University of Maryland-Baltimore School of Pharmacy in 2011. His residency experiences include ambulatory care, outpatient pharmacy staffing, hospice care, and behavioral health. He is involved in several projects and committees related to practice management and collaborative practice agreements. He has published research and articles in peer-reviewed journals.
This document contains the resume of Hollie Sturgeon, PharmD. It summarizes her contact information, career focus in clinical and outpatient pharmacy settings, skills including clinical analysis and patient education, and experience in chronic disease management, acute care, drug information, and various pharmacy intern and technician roles. Her resume also lists her license, degrees, certificates, volunteer experience, and career chronology showing experience in multiple pharmacy settings.
This curriculum vitae summarizes the education and experience of Linda L. Chia. She is currently a PGY-2 Pharmacy Resident at the VA Heartland Network in Kansas City, Missouri, with a focus on pharmacy outcomes and healthcare analytics. She previously completed a PGY-1 residency in managed care pharmacy at Kaiser Permanente in California. Her experience includes positions as a pharmacy intern, technician, and adjunct faculty member. She is also pursuing a Healthcare Analytics Certificate.
This resume is for Dr. Joan Sullivan, who has over 25 years of leadership experience in non-profit organizations and healthcare. She is currently the Foundress and Chief Director of Pharmacy Services at Mission of Mercy, Inc., a non-profit that provides free healthcare to those in need. Prior to this role, she held several director and VP roles at hospitals and healthcare companies. She demonstrates strong leadership, strategic planning, and program development skills. Her experience includes launching new programs, managing pharmacy operations, and developing clinical services.
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.
Jamie Rickards is an Assistant Professor at Notre Dame of Maryland University School of Pharmacy. She has over 10 years of experience in pharmacy practice, including post-graduate residency training. Her background includes teaching pharmacotherapy and conducting research in geriatric pharmacy topics. She is licensed in Maryland and holds Board Certification in Pharmacotherapy.
- Home-based medication therapy management (MTM) services were integrated into a large urban health system between September 2012 and December 2013. A pharmacist provided 74 home visits to 53 patients.
- Most referrals (66%) came from the internal medicine clinic, with about half from physicians and 23% from pharmacists. The top reasons for referral were nonadherence, transportation barriers, and the need for medication reconciliation with home care nurses.
- On average, patients had 3 medication-related problems identified during the home visits. The most common problem was non-compliance, affecting 40% of patients. Home-based MTM allowed for direct assessment of factors influencing medication use and improved care coordination.
Stacey English is a Doctor of Pharmacy candidate at UNC-Chapel Hill with anticipated graduation in May 2015. She has work experience as a pharmacy intern at Kroger Pharmacy and Chapel Hill Compounding. Her advanced pharmacy practice experiences include rotations in ambulatory care, pediatrics, hospital settings, and pharmacy informatics. She is a member of professional organizations and has presented on various pharmacy topics.
Michael F. Akers is a pharmacy resident at Duluth Clinic in Duluth, Minnesota. He received his Doctor of Pharmacy from the University of Maryland-Baltimore School of Pharmacy in 2011. His residency experiences include ambulatory care, outpatient pharmacy staffing, hospice care, and behavioral health. He is involved in several projects and committees related to practice management and collaborative practice agreements. He has published research and articles in peer-reviewed journals.
This document contains the resume of Hollie Sturgeon, PharmD. It summarizes her contact information, career focus in clinical and outpatient pharmacy settings, skills including clinical analysis and patient education, and experience in chronic disease management, acute care, drug information, and various pharmacy intern and technician roles. Her resume also lists her license, degrees, certificates, volunteer experience, and career chronology showing experience in multiple pharmacy settings.
This curriculum vitae summarizes the education and experience of Linda L. Chia. She is currently a PGY-2 Pharmacy Resident at the VA Heartland Network in Kansas City, Missouri, with a focus on pharmacy outcomes and healthcare analytics. She previously completed a PGY-1 residency in managed care pharmacy at Kaiser Permanente in California. Her experience includes positions as a pharmacy intern, technician, and adjunct faculty member. She is also pursuing a Healthcare Analytics Certificate.
This resume is for Dr. Joan Sullivan, who has over 25 years of leadership experience in non-profit organizations and healthcare. She is currently the Foundress and Chief Director of Pharmacy Services at Mission of Mercy, Inc., a non-profit that provides free healthcare to those in need. Prior to this role, she held several director and VP roles at hospitals and healthcare companies. She demonstrates strong leadership, strategic planning, and program development skills. Her experience includes launching new programs, managing pharmacy operations, and developing clinical services.
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.
Jamie Rickards is an Assistant Professor at Notre Dame of Maryland University School of Pharmacy. She has over 10 years of experience in pharmacy practice, including post-graduate residency training. Her background includes teaching pharmacotherapy and conducting research in geriatric pharmacy topics. She is licensed in Maryland and holds Board Certification in Pharmacotherapy.
- Home-based medication therapy management (MTM) services were integrated into a large urban health system between September 2012 and December 2013. A pharmacist provided 74 home visits to 53 patients.
- Most referrals (66%) came from the internal medicine clinic, with about half from physicians and 23% from pharmacists. The top reasons for referral were nonadherence, transportation barriers, and the need for medication reconciliation with home care nurses.
- On average, patients had 3 medication-related problems identified during the home visits. The most common problem was non-compliance, affecting 40% of patients. Home-based MTM allowed for direct assessment of factors influencing medication use and improved care coordination.
This document discusses ambulatory care services provided by pharmacists. It defines ambulatory care as health services for patients who do not require overnight hospital stays. The value of ambulatory pharmacy services includes increasing physician availability, decreasing hospitalization rates, and improving quality of care. Pharmacists play roles in health screening, medication management, and patient education in areas such as diabetes and falls prevention. Studies show pharmacist telephone follow-ups with seniors reduce drug-related problems. Future opportunities for ambulatory care include expanding reimbursement models and measuring quality and patient outcomes.
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.
Tung Truong is a licensed pharmacist in Illinois with experience in hospital, ambulatory care, retail, and community pharmacy settings. He graduated from Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine with a Doctor of Pharmacy degree in 2016. His resume details his clinical experiences providing medication management, immunizations, and patient education. He has a strong record of professional involvement, leadership, and community service.
Medical errors represent a serious public health problem and occur frequently in various healthcare settings. They can involve medicines, surgery, diagnosis, equipment, or lab reports. Studies estimate medical errors may be the third leading cause of death in the US, resulting in between 200,000 to 400,000 deaths per year. Many common types of errors like misdiagnosis, unnecessary treatment, medication mistakes, and uncoordinated care have been reduced through standardized protocols and safety practices, but medical errors still frequently harm and kill patients.
Liz Kallarackal is pursuing a staff pharmacist position. She has a Doctorate of Pharmacy from University of the Incarnate Word Feik School of Pharmacy and experience as an overnight staff pharmacist at New York Presbyterian-Columbia Medical Center. Her experience also includes staff pharmacist roles at CVS pharmacies and pharmacy intern experience. She is licensed as a registered pharmacist in New York and Texas.
Outpatient vs. inpatient treatment powerpointNicholas Rayner
The document compares inpatient and outpatient treatment for addiction and mental health issues. Inpatient treatment involves 24-hour live-in care at a facility for months at a time, while outpatient treatment involves meeting a few times per week for a few hours. The document outlines criteria for determining whether inpatient or outpatient treatment is most appropriate based on a patient's level of risk and needs. It also notes similarities and differences between the two approaches.
This is an actual TMLT medical malpractice case. It involves a pain management specialist who was treating a patient for back pain. This presentation illustrates how action or inaction on the part of the physician led to allegations of professional liability, and how risk management techniques may have either prevented the outcome or increased the physician's defensibility. The case has been modified to protect the privacy of the physician and the patient.
This candidate has over 8 years of experience in customer service, patient relations, and team leadership in medical settings such as field medical services and clinical customer relations. They are highly skilled in areas like emergency services, medical terminology, and patient administration. The candidate also has a background in supervising other medical personnel and playing a key role in improving customer satisfaction in military medical clinics.
Establishing a Drug Information Centre outlines the functions and objectives of a Drug Information Centre (DIC). The main functions of a DIC are to provide written or verbal drug information to healthcare providers, organizations, and the public. The objectives of a DIC are to promote evidence-based practice, improve patient adherence, provide accurate information, and maintain an organized drug database. A DIC is staffed by pharmacists, pharmacy technicians, medical professionals like toxicologists, and support staff with library and computer skills.
Information services, Drug Information services, Poison information centre, Poison information centre sources, working of Poison information centre, Drug information centre, Objective of Drug information centre, Sources of drug information , drug information sources, List of poison and Drug information centre, drug and poison information centre, computerized services, Storage and Retrieval of information, Storage and Retrieval of drug information, Information Storage and Retrieval systems, Primary drug information source, Secondary drug information source, Tertiary drug information source
This is an actual TMLT medical malpractice case. It involves a family physician and a patient prescribed to pain medication. This presentation illustrates how action or inaction on the part of the physician led to allegations of professional liability, and how risk management techniques may have either prevented the outcome or increased the physician's defensibility. The case has been modified to protect the privacy of the physician and the patient.
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.
DRUG INFORMATION SERVICE AND DRUG INFORMATION BULLETINSHIVANEE VYAS
"Drug information center is one of the departments of the hospital and gives the recent knowledge and information about the medical, pharmacy field at any time to the physicians, staff of the hospital and to the citizens”.
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.
The document discusses outpatient departments (OPDs) in hospitals. It defines an OPD and provides reasons for their establishment, including rising healthcare costs and limited hospital beds. OPDs provide about 30-35% of hospital revenue. Key points made include:
- OPDs see over 50% of inpatients and act as screening points for treatment need. On average, 500 outpatients are seen per hospital bed per year.
- Common problems faced by OPDs include insufficient doctors and facilities, long wait times, and lack of privacy. Queuing theory principles and appointment systems can help minimize wait times.
- Proper design, staffing, equipment and management of patient flow are needed to improve OPD efficiency
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.
This document provides information on various pharmacy records and reports that must be maintained, including controlled substance inventory, medication orders, manufacturing records, purchase records, and workload records. It discusses the importance of accurate prescription filing records for both legal and patient care purposes. An example drug profile on Duloxetine is presented, outlining its description, indications, contraindications, warnings, dosage, and adverse effects. The document also discusses patient medication profiles and examples of drug interaction related to absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion.
This document outlines the role of pharmacy technicians in community pharmacies. It defines a community pharmacy as an independently owned pharmacy run by pharmacists. The scope of community pharmacies includes processing prescriptions, providing clinical services, patient care, drug monitoring, and assisting with minor ailments. The document also discusses primary health care and its attributes such as being essential, universally accessible, and community-based. Finally, it describes the role of pharmacy technicians as aiding the pharmacist in filling prescriptions, operating the cash register, maintaining inventory and patient records, and preparing insurance forms.
This document is Amber Watson's curriculum vitae from May 2015. It summarizes her education, including a Doctor of Pharmacy from the University of Tennessee Health Science Center College of Pharmacy in 2015. It also outlines her extensive experiential learning, including rotations in cardiology, mental health, critical care, and more. Her professional experience includes intern roles at Kroger and Walmart pharmacies. She holds an Arkansas pharmacy intern license and certifications in immunization delivery and CPR.
This document is Amber Watson's curriculum vitae. It outlines her education at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center College of Pharmacy where she is expected to graduate with a Doctor of Pharmacy in May 2015. It also details her experiential learning including rotations in cardiology, community pharmacy, mental health, and more. Her CV lists professional experience as an intern and technician, certifications, leadership roles, presentations, honors and awards.
Emily Clay Eastman is a licensed pharmacist who graduated from the University of Kentucky College of Pharmacy with a Doctor of Pharmacy degree and a Masters in Business Administration. She has over 4 years of experience as a pharmacy intern and pharmacist at various healthcare settings including hospitals, clinics, and retail pharmacies. She maintains a high GPA and has received several honors and awards for her academic and professional achievements.
This document discusses ambulatory care services provided by pharmacists. It defines ambulatory care as health services for patients who do not require overnight hospital stays. The value of ambulatory pharmacy services includes increasing physician availability, decreasing hospitalization rates, and improving quality of care. Pharmacists play roles in health screening, medication management, and patient education in areas such as diabetes and falls prevention. Studies show pharmacist telephone follow-ups with seniors reduce drug-related problems. Future opportunities for ambulatory care include expanding reimbursement models and measuring quality and patient outcomes.
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.
Tung Truong is a licensed pharmacist in Illinois with experience in hospital, ambulatory care, retail, and community pharmacy settings. He graduated from Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine with a Doctor of Pharmacy degree in 2016. His resume details his clinical experiences providing medication management, immunizations, and patient education. He has a strong record of professional involvement, leadership, and community service.
Medical errors represent a serious public health problem and occur frequently in various healthcare settings. They can involve medicines, surgery, diagnosis, equipment, or lab reports. Studies estimate medical errors may be the third leading cause of death in the US, resulting in between 200,000 to 400,000 deaths per year. Many common types of errors like misdiagnosis, unnecessary treatment, medication mistakes, and uncoordinated care have been reduced through standardized protocols and safety practices, but medical errors still frequently harm and kill patients.
Liz Kallarackal is pursuing a staff pharmacist position. She has a Doctorate of Pharmacy from University of the Incarnate Word Feik School of Pharmacy and experience as an overnight staff pharmacist at New York Presbyterian-Columbia Medical Center. Her experience also includes staff pharmacist roles at CVS pharmacies and pharmacy intern experience. She is licensed as a registered pharmacist in New York and Texas.
Outpatient vs. inpatient treatment powerpointNicholas Rayner
The document compares inpatient and outpatient treatment for addiction and mental health issues. Inpatient treatment involves 24-hour live-in care at a facility for months at a time, while outpatient treatment involves meeting a few times per week for a few hours. The document outlines criteria for determining whether inpatient or outpatient treatment is most appropriate based on a patient's level of risk and needs. It also notes similarities and differences between the two approaches.
This is an actual TMLT medical malpractice case. It involves a pain management specialist who was treating a patient for back pain. This presentation illustrates how action or inaction on the part of the physician led to allegations of professional liability, and how risk management techniques may have either prevented the outcome or increased the physician's defensibility. The case has been modified to protect the privacy of the physician and the patient.
This candidate has over 8 years of experience in customer service, patient relations, and team leadership in medical settings such as field medical services and clinical customer relations. They are highly skilled in areas like emergency services, medical terminology, and patient administration. The candidate also has a background in supervising other medical personnel and playing a key role in improving customer satisfaction in military medical clinics.
Establishing a Drug Information Centre outlines the functions and objectives of a Drug Information Centre (DIC). The main functions of a DIC are to provide written or verbal drug information to healthcare providers, organizations, and the public. The objectives of a DIC are to promote evidence-based practice, improve patient adherence, provide accurate information, and maintain an organized drug database. A DIC is staffed by pharmacists, pharmacy technicians, medical professionals like toxicologists, and support staff with library and computer skills.
Information services, Drug Information services, Poison information centre, Poison information centre sources, working of Poison information centre, Drug information centre, Objective of Drug information centre, Sources of drug information , drug information sources, List of poison and Drug information centre, drug and poison information centre, computerized services, Storage and Retrieval of information, Storage and Retrieval of drug information, Information Storage and Retrieval systems, Primary drug information source, Secondary drug information source, Tertiary drug information source
This is an actual TMLT medical malpractice case. It involves a family physician and a patient prescribed to pain medication. This presentation illustrates how action or inaction on the part of the physician led to allegations of professional liability, and how risk management techniques may have either prevented the outcome or increased the physician's defensibility. The case has been modified to protect the privacy of the physician and the patient.
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.
DRUG INFORMATION SERVICE AND DRUG INFORMATION BULLETINSHIVANEE VYAS
"Drug information center is one of the departments of the hospital and gives the recent knowledge and information about the medical, pharmacy field at any time to the physicians, staff of the hospital and to the citizens”.
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.
The document discusses outpatient departments (OPDs) in hospitals. It defines an OPD and provides reasons for their establishment, including rising healthcare costs and limited hospital beds. OPDs provide about 30-35% of hospital revenue. Key points made include:
- OPDs see over 50% of inpatients and act as screening points for treatment need. On average, 500 outpatients are seen per hospital bed per year.
- Common problems faced by OPDs include insufficient doctors and facilities, long wait times, and lack of privacy. Queuing theory principles and appointment systems can help minimize wait times.
- Proper design, staffing, equipment and management of patient flow are needed to improve OPD efficiency
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.
This document provides information on various pharmacy records and reports that must be maintained, including controlled substance inventory, medication orders, manufacturing records, purchase records, and workload records. It discusses the importance of accurate prescription filing records for both legal and patient care purposes. An example drug profile on Duloxetine is presented, outlining its description, indications, contraindications, warnings, dosage, and adverse effects. The document also discusses patient medication profiles and examples of drug interaction related to absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion.
This document outlines the role of pharmacy technicians in community pharmacies. It defines a community pharmacy as an independently owned pharmacy run by pharmacists. The scope of community pharmacies includes processing prescriptions, providing clinical services, patient care, drug monitoring, and assisting with minor ailments. The document also discusses primary health care and its attributes such as being essential, universally accessible, and community-based. Finally, it describes the role of pharmacy technicians as aiding the pharmacist in filling prescriptions, operating the cash register, maintaining inventory and patient records, and preparing insurance forms.
This document is Amber Watson's curriculum vitae from May 2015. It summarizes her education, including a Doctor of Pharmacy from the University of Tennessee Health Science Center College of Pharmacy in 2015. It also outlines her extensive experiential learning, including rotations in cardiology, mental health, critical care, and more. Her professional experience includes intern roles at Kroger and Walmart pharmacies. She holds an Arkansas pharmacy intern license and certifications in immunization delivery and CPR.
This document is Amber Watson's curriculum vitae. It outlines her education at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center College of Pharmacy where she is expected to graduate with a Doctor of Pharmacy in May 2015. It also details her experiential learning including rotations in cardiology, community pharmacy, mental health, and more. Her CV lists professional experience as an intern and technician, certifications, leadership roles, presentations, honors and awards.
Emily Clay Eastman is a licensed pharmacist who graduated from the University of Kentucky College of Pharmacy with a Doctor of Pharmacy degree and a Masters in Business Administration. She has over 4 years of experience as a pharmacy intern and pharmacist at various healthcare settings including hospitals, clinics, and retail pharmacies. She maintains a high GPA and has received several honors and awards for her academic and professional achievements.
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.
Diana Khaimova is a PharmD candidate with experience as an intern at CVS pharmacy and rotations at various hospitals and pharmacies. She has a Bachelors in Science and an A.O.S degree in Ophthalmic Dispensing. Her experience includes filling prescriptions, patient counseling, inventory management, and clinical work rounding with medical teams and making medication recommendations. She is currently completing an APPE rotation in Medication Therapy Management.
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.
Daniela Tierson has extensive education and experience in pharmacy. She received her Doctor of Pharmacy from Albany College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences in 2011. Since then, she has worked in various pharmacy settings including as an adjunct faculty member, preceptor, staff pharmacist, and pharmacist. Currently, she works as a staff pharmacist at Oswego Hospital where she has developed programs to improve patient care and safety.
This document is a curriculum vitae for Wendy Nguyen, a pharmacy resident at UTMB CMC - Huntsville, TX. It outlines her education, certifications, professional experiences, rotations, projects, presentations, research experience, teaching experience, honors/awards, and publications. Her education includes a Bachelor of Science in Biochemistry from UCLA and a Doctor of Pharmacy from Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine. She is currently completing her PGY-1 pharmacy residency with a focus on longitudinal rotations in internal medicine, staffing, anticoagulation, ambulatory care, and more.
Andrew P. Johnson has extensive experience as a clinical pharmacist in Texas. He received his Doctor of Pharmacy from Southwestern Oklahoma State University in 2014. His postgraduate training includes an ASHP-accredited PGY1 residency at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital. He is board certified in pharmacotherapy and holds several certifications. Currently, he works as a clinical staff pharmacist at Texas Health Resources in Dallas.
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.
This document provides a summary of the applicant's qualifications for a pharmacy position. He has over 20 years of experience providing clinical pharmacy services and managing pharmacy operations. His skills include patient counseling, immunizations, medication management, and clinical programs. He also has experience scheduling pharmacy staff. The applicant is seeking a position that allows him to utilize his clinical and management experience.
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.
This document is the resume of Beth A. Starkey, which details her education, licensure, professional memberships and leadership roles, honors and awards, work experience including pharmacy internships and APPE rotations, presentations, and references. It shows that she received a Doctor of Pharmacy degree from Ohio Northern University with a minor in public health and has extensive experience and training in both retail and hospital pharmacy settings.
This document is a resume for Jill Reifsnyder, a pharmacy student at Wilkes University. It outlines her education, including a Bachelor's degree from Wilkes University and pursuing a Doctor of Pharmacy degree. It also details her clerkship, internship and work experiences in various pharmacy settings like hospitals, long-term care facilities, and community pharmacies. Additional sections provide information on her licensure, certifications, professional affiliations, honors received and community involvement.
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.
This document is a curriculum vitae for Justin D. Shanks that outlines his education, certifications, professional experience, advanced and introductory pharmacy practice experiences, research experience, publications, presentations, professional affiliations, leadership experience, awards, and other professional involvement. He is currently a Doctor of Pharmacy Candidate at Texas A&M Health Science Center Rangel College of Pharmacy and has extensive experience as a pharmacy intern and technician.
Krishna Patel is a Pharm.D. candidate at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center College of Pharmacy. He has worked as an intern at Kroger Pharmacy since 2014 and has completed several advanced pharmacy practice experiences in various settings including hospital, community, ambulatory care, and research. Patel has held leadership roles in professional organizations and has presented on various pharmacy topics. He is pursuing a career as a clinical pharmacist.
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.
Guy L. Talbourdet has over 5 years of experience as a licensed pharmacist in Maine. He received his Doctor of Pharmacy from the University of New England College of Pharmacy in 2014. During his time in pharmacy school, he completed advanced pharmacy practice experiences in various settings including psychiatric research, institutional, community care, acute care, and ambulatory care. He has worked as a pharmacist for Rite Aid in Central Maine since 2015.
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.
1. Erica Wilson CV
Page 1
CONTACT INFORMATION
810 East 96th
Street
Odessa, Texas 79765
432-847-7248
email: ejwilson7911@gmail.com
EDUCATION
Doctor of Pharmacy
Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center
School of Pharmacy (TTUHSC SOP); Abilene, Texas
August 2011-May 2015
Bachelor of Science Summa Cum Laude
McMurry University (McM); Abilene, Texas
Minor: Business Administration
August 2007-May 2011
PROFESSIONAL CERTIFICATIONS
Pharmacist Preceptor
Certified by Texas State Board of Pharmacy
Preceptor License Number: 56866
Registered Pharmacist
Certified by Texas State Board of Pharmacy
Pharmacist License Number: 56886
Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support
American Heart Association
Pharmacist Immunizer Certification
Texas Tech University HSC School of Pharmacy
Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education
Basic Life Support (CPR/AED) for Healthcare providers
American Heart Association
Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support
American Heart Association
Certified Pharmacist Intern
Certified by Texas State Board of Pharmacy
Intern License Number: 29075
Student Intern Immunizer Certification
Texas Tech University HSC School of Pharmacy
Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education
December 2015-present
August 2015-present
July 2015-present
July 2015-present
June 2011-present
July 2015-present
May 2011-August 2015
May 2012-July 2015
ERICA WILSON
2. Erica Wilson CV
Page 2
PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE
PGY1 Pharmacy Practice Resident-ASHP Accredited
500 West 4th
Street Odessa, Texas 79761
Supervisor: Minh Hong, Pharm. D., BCPS
July 2015-present
• Shadowing and performing job activities of the hospitals’ clinical pharmacists
• Four core rotations (Internal Medicine, Critical Care, Emergency Medicine, and
Trauma) and three elective rotations (Critical Care 2, Nephrology, Infectious
Disease)
• Precept pharmacy student interns
• Staff pharmacist on rotating weekend shifts
Professor of Continuing Education
Odessa College
201 West University Blvd. Odessa, Texas 79764
Supervisor: Marie Vasquez-Brooks
• Continuing education pharmacy technician course
instructor
Sept 2015-present
Pharmacist Intern April 2014-April 2015
Hendrick Medical Center
1900 Pine St, Abilene, Texas 79601
Supervisor: Michelle Clay, Pharm. D.
• Filling on-demand medication orders, loading and filling Pyxis machines, and
delivering intravenous on-demand medications
Pharmacist Intern
Cardinal Health National Central Pharmacy
3402 S 14th St, Abilene, Texas 79605
Supervisor: Steve Williamson, RPh
March 2012-May 2014
• Sterile compounding, and non-sterile compounding, and participation in routine
sterility testing, pyrogen testing, and endotoxin testing studies on sterile products
• Retail pharmacy intern duties
Organic Chemistry Lab Assistant June 2009-August 2010
McMurry University Chemistry Department
1401 Sayles Blvd, Abilene, Texas 79605
Supervisor: Hyunshun Shin, Ph.D.
• Synthesized two possible anti-cancer inhibitors
• Performed many organic chemistry laboratory techniques including thin layer
chromatography, column chromatography, reactions under reflux, nuclear
magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and infrared spectroscopy.
3. Erica Wilson CV
Page 3
PGY1 RESIDENCY PRACTICE EXPERIENCE
Internal Medicine Elective June 2016
Medical Center Health System; Odessa, Texas
Preceptor: Minh Hong, Pharm. D., BCPS
Nephrology May 2016
Medical Center Health System; Odessa, Texas
Preceptor: Anand Reddy MD, MRCP
Infectious Disease April 2016
Medical Center Health System; Odessa, Texas
Preceptor: Satish Mocherla MD
• Attended outpatient clinic with physician and consulted with MD on medication
therapy and monitoring
• Counseling patients on medications in outpatient clinic
• Attended inpatient rounds and participated in patient and topic discussions
Trauma February 2016
Medical Center Health System; Odessa, Texas
Preceptors: Joyce Marshall, Pharm. D., BCPS; Ramsie Lujan Pharm. D.
• Daily inpatient rounding with trauma and surgical services
• Medication and clinical therapy recommendations and monitoring
• Pharmacokinetic dosing and therapeutic drug monitoring
• Weekly topic discussions and journal clubs, medication use evaluation
and policy revisions
Critical Care Elective January 2016
Medical Center Health System; Odessa, Texas
Preceptor: James Palmer, Pharm. D.
• Daily inpatient rounding with Texas Tech Internal Medicine Critical Care teams
• Medication and clinical therapy recommendations and monitoring
• Pharmacokinetic dosing and therapeutic drug monitoring
• Weekly topic discussions and journal clubs, TPN policy revision, in-service to
medical residents and patient case presentation
Emergency Medicine November 2015
Medical Center Health System; Odessa, Texas
Preceptor: Nathan Ehni, Pharm. D.
• Participation in a variety of patient care activities including drug dosing and
administration recommendations, and medication reconciliation
• Response to patient codes and trauma activations
• Weekly topic discussions, formal patient presentation and provided nursing
education
4. Erica Wilson CV
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Critical Care Sept 2015
Medical Center Health System; Odessa, Texas
Preceptor: James Palmer, Pharm. D.
• Daily inpatient rounding with Texas Tech Internal Medicine
Critical Care teams
• Medication and clinical therapy recommendations and
monitoring
• Pharmacokinetic dosing and therapeutic drug monitoring
• Weekly topic discussions, drug information questions,
leadership reflections, and in-service to medical residents
Adult Medicine August 2015
Medical Center Health System; Odessa, Texas
Preceptor: Minh Hong, Pharm. D., BCPS; Josh Ward Pharm. D., BCPS
• Daily inpatient rounding with Texas Tech Internal Medicine and Family Practice
teams
• Medication and clinical therapy recommendations and monitoring
• Pharmacokinetic dosing and therapeutic drug monitoring
• Weekly topic discussions, drug information questions, and in-service to medical
residents
Infectious Disease Longitudinal July 2015-present
Medical Center Health System; Odessa, Texas
Preceptor: Minh Hong, Pharm. D., BCPS
• Weekly infectious disease rounds with infectious disease physician
• Medication and clinical therapy recommendations and monitoring
• Monthly infectious disease topic discussions
• Intervention data collection to report to infection control
Management Longitudinal July 2015-present
Medical Center Health System; Odessa, Texas
Preceptor: Charlene Dawson, RPh, MS
• Monthly meetings with pharmacy director to discuss leadership books and
reading assignments
• Drug use evaluations and drug monograph presentations and research for
Pharmacy & Therapeutics committee
• Member of Pharmacy & Therapeutic committee and infection control committee
Major Project Research July 2015-present
Medical Center Health System; Odessa, Texas
Preceptor: James Palmer, Pharm. D.; Ramsie Lujan, Pharm. D.
• IRB approved retrospective analysis of hydrocortisone dosing in septic shock
• Presentation of research at TSHP Alcalde conference, poster at TSHP Annual
conference
• Manuscript to be completed by June 2016
5. Erica Wilson CV
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Pharmacy Operations July 2015
Medical Center Health System; Odessa, Texas
Preceptor: Charlene Dawson, RPh, MS; Minh Hong, Pharm. D., BCPS
• Pharmacy orientation process with shadowing of pharmacists in the various
hospital areas as well as pharmacy technicians
• Order-entry and computer software and software training
ADVANCED PHARMACY PRACTICE EXPERIENCE
Advanced Pediatrics April 2015
TTUHSC SOP; Abilene, Texas
Preceptor: Chephra McKee, Pharm. D.
• Evaluated the electronic medical records and charts of patients in the pediatric
unit daily and made clinical interventions which were documented daily
• Shadowed pediatricians in a pediatric medicine clinic daily aiding in medication
choices and dosages
• An in-service was presented to the pediatricians.
Advanced Geriatrics February 2015
Hendrick Medical Center House Calls; Abilene, Texas
Preceptor: Becky Mahan, Pharm. D.
• Physical and occupational therapy rounds
• Patient home visits involving disease state and medication education
• Pharmacy medication reconciliation
Advanced Primary Care January 2015
TDCJ- Middleton Unit; Abilene, Texas
Preceptor: Livia Macedo, Pharm. D.
• Daily patient interviews, physical examinations, spirometry, and manual blood
pressure assessments
• Disease state management (diabetes, hyperlipidemia, hypertension,
asthma/COPD, and anticoagulation)
• Correctional facility unit pharmacy audits
Advanced Elective Infectious Diseases Nov 2014
Hendrick Medical Center; Abilene, Texas
Preceptor: Greg Perry, RPh
• Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee tedizolid presentation
• Antimicrobial Stewardship (appropriateness, de-escalation, dosing, monitoring)
via electronic medical record review and Sentri 7/Quantify
• Medical rounds with infectious disease physician
6. Erica Wilson CV
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Advanced Hospital/Health Systems Sept 2014
Abilene Regional Medical Center; Abilene, Texas
Preceptor: Dustin Harms, Pharm. D.
• Quality assurance documentation and monitoring
• Coumadin counseling
• Skilled nursing unit medication reconciliation and clinical interventions
• IV to PO conversions and medication monitoring via Sentri 7
Advanced Rural August 2014
Sander’s Drug Store; Albany, Texas
Preceptor: Howard Todd, RPh
• Received new prescriptions, transferred prescriptions, and filled prescriptions
• Counseled patients, and evaluated patients’ medication regimens
• Communicated with patients and insurance companies, and ordered medications
Advanced Critical Care Unit (CCU) Elective July 2014
Hendrick Medical Center; Abilene Texas
Preceptor: Young Lee, Pharm. D., BCPS
• Evaluated the electronic medical records and charts of patients in the critical
care unit daily and made clinical interventions which were documented and
followed daily using Sentri 7/Quantifi
• Evaluated half of all CCU patients and completed half of all CCU official
pharmacy consults daily
• Two in-service presentations were given and two case reports were completed
that will be submitted for publication.
Advanced Adult Medicine May 2014
Abilene Regional Medical Center; Abilene, Texas
Preceptor: Chris Tawwater, Pharm. D., BCPS
• Electronic medical record and chart review of patients in the intensive care unit,
cardiology/respiratory, oncology and medical/surgery floors, with daily therapy
and dosing interventions
• In-service regarding the implementation of an antibiotic stewardship strategy was
presented to multiple physicians and laboratory personnel
• Patient electronic medical records in various different clinical situations were
reviewed and interventions documented using unique institution-specific rules
with the software Sentri 7.
INTRODUCTORY PHARMACY PRACTICE EXPERIENCE
Intermediate Hospital February 2014
Hendrick Medical Center; Abilene, Texas
Preceptor: Michelle Clay, Pharm. D.
• Shadowed clinical and staff pharmacists
• Assisted medication couriers, Pyxis, and fast fill technicians
• Sterile and non-sterile compounding, and a calcium-phosphate compatibility in-
service
7. Erica Wilson CV
Page 7
Intermediate Community Nov 2013
United Markets Pharmacy; Abilene, Texas
Preceptor: Toni Little, RPh
• Counseled patients, performed blood pressure monitoring, and gave
immunizations
• Received prescriptions over the phone, communicated with doctors and nurses,
and filled and checked prescriptions
• Created an informational brochure about influenza vaccinations
Ambulatory Care Clinical Skills Sept 2013
Dyess Airforce Base; Abilene, Texas
Preceptor: Molly Minze, Pharm. D., BCACP
• Diabetes, hyperlipidemia, hypertension guideline review
• Manual blood pressure assessments, daily patient interviews, and
pharmacologic management discussions
• Daily targeted SOAP notes, and a journal club presentation
Inpatient Clinical Skills August 2013
Abilene Regional Medical Center; Abilene, Texas
Preceptor: Chris Tawwater, Pharm. D., BCPS
• Patient electronic medical record and chart review, targeted SOAP notes for
each patient, and various clinical interventions
• Medication review and reconciliation, formal SOAP notes, drug information
question and journal club research and presentations
AWARDS & SCHOLARSHIPS
West Texas Society of Health-System Pharmacists
(WTSHP) Travel Scholarship
American College of Clinical Pharmacy (ACCP)
Student Travel Award Annual Meeting 2014
April 2015
Sept 2014
Willy I., Wanda and W.F. Martin Scholarship (TTUHSC
SOP)
Academic Achievement Scholarship (TTUHSC SOP)
Departmental Honors in Biochemistry (McM)
Graduate of the University Honors Program (McM)
Dean’s List (McM)
Academic All-Conference Basketball (McM)
Outstanding Senior in Chemistry & Biochemistry (McM)
Outstanding Youth of Abilene (Breakfast Optimist Club
of Abilene)
Outstanding Junior in Chemistry & Biochemistry (McM)
Outstanding Student in Sophomore Literature (McM)
2012-2014
2012, 2013
May 2011
May 2011
2007-2011
2009-2011
April 2011
Nov 2010
April 2010
May 2009
8. Erica Wilson CV
Page 8
PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPS
American College of Clinical Pharmacy Jul 2014-May 2015
Contributions
Critical Care Practice and Research Networks (PRN)
Cardiology PRN member
Critical Care PRN Student/Resident/Fellow
Committee
Regional/National Events
ACCP Annual Meeting in Austin, Texas
August 2014
August 2014
November 2014
October 2014
American Society of Health-System Pharmacists
(ASHP)
Aug 2013-present
Regional/National Events
Midyear Clinical Meeting, New Orleans, LA
Midyear Clinical Meeting, Anaheim, CA
December 2015
December 2014
Christian Pharmacists Fellowship International Aug 2012-May 2015
Phi Delta Chi Professional Pharmacy Fraternity
Leadership
Regional Structure Review Committee Chair
Texas Alumni Chapter
Leadership
Vice President
Gamma Eta Chapter
Nov 2015-present
Nov 2014-present
Nov 2015-present
Sept 2011-present
Leadership
Worthy Chief Counselor (President)
Worthy Vice Counselor (Vice President)
Scholarship Committee Chair
Pledge Class President
April 2013-April 2014
April 2012-April 2013
April 2012-April 2013
Sept 2011-April 2012
Regional/National Events
70th
Grand Council in Albuquerque, New Mexico
15th
Annual South Central Region Founder’s Day
South Central Regionals Oklahoma City, OK
14th
Annual South Central Region Founder’s Day
69th
Grand Council in Omaha, Nebraska
13th
Annual South Central Region Founder’s Day
August 2015
November 2014
March 2014
November 2013
August 2013
November 2012
Awards
Outstanding Brother
Outstanding Gamma Eta Chapter Participation
First Annual Chapter House Cup Champions
January Brother of the Month
October Brother of the Month
Outstanding New Brother
March Brother of the Month
2013 & 2014
2013 & 2014
April 2014
January 2014
October 2012
April 2012
March 2012
9. Erica Wilson CV
Page 9
Contributions
Philanthropy Committee member
Coordinator of 1st
Annual Chapter Banquet
Scholarship Committee member
Membership Committee member
Fundraising Committee member
Coordinator of Smoking Cessation event
Coordinator of St. Jude Rush Raffle fundraiser
Aug 2013-April 2014
April 2013
Aug 2012-April 2014
Aug 2012-Oct. 2014
Aug 2012-May 2015
March 2012
October 2011
Phi Lambda Sigma, Beta Pi October 2012-present
Leadership
Campus Vice President May 2013-April 2014
Contributions
Professional Development Committee member
Selection Committee member
Professional Development Presentation Coordinator
May 2014-May 2015
May 2013-May 2015
2013 & 2014
Rho Chi, Gamma Mu March 2013-present
Leadership
Vice President April 2014-May 2015
Awards
First Year Achievement April 2012
Texas Society of Health-System Pharmacists
(TSHP)
August 2013-present
Regional/National Events
TSHP 2016 Annual Seminar in Frisco, TX
TSHP 2015 Annual Seminar in San Antonio, TX
TSHP 2014 Annual Seminar in Houston, TX
April 2016
April 2015
April 2014
Texas Tech Student Society of Health-System
Pharmacists (TTSSHP)
August 2013-May 2015
West Texas Society of Health-System Pharmacists
(WTSHP)
August 2013-May 2015
Leadership
TTSSHP & WTSHP Chapter Liaison Sept 2014-May 2015
SCHOLARLY ACTIVITIES
PGY1 Trauma In-Service:
Perioperative Enoxaparin
April 2016
PGY1 Trauma Journal Club: March 2016
Zangbar B, Khalil M, Rhee P, et al. Metoprolol improves survival in
severe traumatic brain injury independent of heart rate control.
Jour Surg Res. 2016.
10. Erica Wilson CV
Page 10
PGY1 Trauma Journal Club: March 2016
Song K, Melroy MJ, Whipple OC. Optimizing Multimodal Analgesia
with Intravenous Acetaminophen and Opioids in Postoperative Bariatric
Patients. Pharmacotherapy. 2014.
PGY1 Critical Care Elective Journal Club: February 2016
Wang W, Li HL, Wang DX, et al. Haloperidol prophylaxis decreases
delirium incidence in elderly patients after noncardiac surgery: A
randomized controlled trial. Crit Care Med. 2012.
PGY1 Critical Care Elective Journal Club: February 2016
Williams B, MacDonald TM, Morant S, et al. Spironolactone versus
placebo, bisoprolol, and doxazosin to determine the optimal treatment
for drug-resistant hypertension (PATHWAY-2): a randomised, double-blind,
crossover trial. Lancet. 2015.
PGY1 Critical Care Elective Journal Club: January 2016
Torres, A, Sibila O, Ferrer M, et al. Effect of Corticosteroids on Treatment
Failure Among Hospitalized Patients With Severe Community-Acquired
Pneumonia and High Inflammatory Response A Randomized Clinical Trial.
JAMA. 2015.
PGY1 Critical Care Elective Journal Club: January 2016
Jakob SM, Ruokonen E, Grounds RM, et al. Dexmedetomidine vs
Midazolam or Propofol for Sedation Durin Prolonged Mechanical
Ventilation-Two Randomized Controlled Trials. JAMA. 2012.
PGY1 Critical Care Elective In-Service:
Idarucizumab
January 2016
PGY1 Emergency Department In-Service:
Lipid Emulsion for Drug Toxicity
January 2016
PGY1 Critical Care Medicine In-Service:
Gram Negative Resistance in the Intensive Care Unit
October 2015
PGY1 Internal Medicine Journal Club: Sept 2015
McMurray JJV, Packer M, Desai AS, et al. Angiotensin—Neprilysin
Inhibition Versus Enalapril in Heart Failure. N Engl J Med. 2014.
PGY1 Internal Medicine In-Service:
Appropriate Vitamin K Use in the Hospital
Sept 2015
Advanced Pediatrics In-Service:
Procalcitonin use in Pediatric Patients
April 2015
Advanced Geriatrics Journal Club:
Fick DM, Steis MR, Waller JL, Inouye SK. Delirium
superimposed on dementia is associated with prolonged
length of stay and poor outcomes and hospitalized older
adults. J Hosp Med. 2013.
February 2015
11. Erica Wilson CV
Page 11
Advanced Elective Infectious Disease In-Service:
Extended Beta-lactamases and Enterobacteriaceae
Bugs
High-Level Aminoglycoside Resistant Enterococcus
Infections
December 2014
November 2014
Advanced Elective Infectious Disease Case
Reports:
Pseudomonas Pneumonia
MSSE Bacteremia—Contamination or Disease?
December 2014
December 2014
Advanced Rural Project:
Texas Administrative Code Class A Pharmacy Personnel Duties
and Responsibilities for Sanders Drug Policies and Procedures
Manual
Sept 2014
Advanced Critical Care Elective In-Service:
Heparin & enoxaparin institution protocols
August 2014
Adult Medicine In-Service: July 2014
Wilson EJ, Trapp K. Antibiotic selective reporting: how reporting
culture sensitivities selectively may aid in antimicrobial stewardship
efforts at ARMC
Intermediate Hospital In-Service:
Calcium-phosphate compatibility in sterile TPN compounding
February 2014
Intermediate Ambulatory Care Journal Club:
Hermida RC, Ayala DE, Mojon A, Fernandez JR. Influence of time
of day of blood pressure-lowering treatment on cardiovascular risk
in hypertensive patients with type 2 diabetes. Diabetes Care. 2011.
October 2013
Inpatient Clinical Skills Drug Information Memo:
The use of hypertonic saline solution in the treatment of heart
failure
Sept 2013
Inpatient Clinical Skills Journal Club: August 2013
Paterna S, Fasullo S, Perrinello G, et al. Short-term effects of hypertonic
saline solution in acute heart failure and long-term effects of a moderate
sodium restriction in patients with compensated heart failure with New York
Heart Association Class III (Class C) (SMAC-HF Study). Am J Med Sci. 2011.
PRESENTATIONS & PUBLICATIONS
Presentations
Poster: 2016 TSHP Annual Meeting
Retrospective Analysis of Hydrocortisone Bolus versus
Continuous Dosing in Septic Shock Patients
--Audience: pharmacists
April 2016
12. Erica Wilson CV
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Platform Residency Research Presentation at 2016 Alcalde Conference April 2016
Retrospective Analysis of Hydrocortisone Bolus versus Continuous
Dosing in Septic Shock Patients
--Audience: pharmacists
PGY1 Critical Care Case & Pharmacotherapy Presentation
Penicillin De-sensitization in a Pregnant Woman with Syphillis
--Audience: pharmacists
February 2016
PGY1 Emergency Department Case & Pharmacotherapy Presentation December
Alteplase for Massive Pulmonary Embolism during Cardiac Arrest 2015
--Audience: pharmacists
Infection Control Committee Medical Center Hospital
Vancomycin versus alternative therapy during acute kidney
injury medication use evaluation
--Audience: physicians, pharmacists, nurses, medical staff
December
2015
Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee Medical Center Hospital
Idaricuzumab Drug Monograph
--Audience: physicians, pharmacists, nurses, medical staff
November
2015
Infectious Disease Microorganisms and Antimicrobial Review
Drug Class Review
--Audience: Texas Tech Medical Students
October 2015
Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee Medical Center Hospital
Diclofenac Drug Monograph
--Audience: physicians, pharmacists, nurses, medical staff
Sept 2015
Advanced Geriatrics
Differentiating Dementia from Delirium
--Audience: pharmacists and pharmacy students
March 2015
Grand Rounds
No Action Today, No Cure Tommorrow, The Role of
Antimicrobial Stewardship Programs
--Audience: pharmacists and pharmacy students
February 2015
Poster: ASHP Midyear Clinical Meeting in Anaheim, CA
Case Report and Literature Review of Venous
Thromboembolism Prophylaxis in Morbidly Obese Medically
Ill Patients
--Audience: pharmacists and pharmacy students
December
2014
Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee Hendrick Medical Center
Tedizolid Drug Formulary Review-New MRSA Management
--Audience: physcians, pharmacists, students, medical staff
November
2014
Grand Rounds
Dual Antiplatelet Therapy and Oral Anticoagulation after
Percutaneous Coronary Intervention
--Audience: pharmacists and pharmacy students
October 2014
WTSHP Cornucopia of New Pharmacotherapy
Continuing Education Presentation: Updates in MRSA
Management
--Audience: pharmacists and pharmacy students
September
2014
13. Erica Wilson CV
Page 13
Poster: TSHP 2014 Annual Seminar in Houston, Texas
Does vitamin C prevent acute kidney injury in patients
receiving vancomycin? Saagar Akundi, Greg Perry, Young
R. Lee, David S. Fike, Sofia Mnjoyan, Erica Wilson
(presenter)
--Audience: pharmacists and pharmacy students
April 2014
Honors Thesis (McM Honors Program)
Novel Putrescine Analogues Targeting Spermidine
Synthase
--Audience: college professors and college students
May 2011
RESEARCH EXPERIENCE
Author of Retrospective Analysis
Erica Wilson, Javier Flores-Guardado, Ramsie Lujan,
James Palmer, Anushi Bulumulle;, Angel Tejada. A
retrospective analysis of hydrocortisone bolus versus
continuous dosing in septic shock patients
June 2016
Manuscript Contributing Writer
Livia Macedo, Suart Haines, Jeannie Lee, et al. What is the
Impact of Interprofessional Primary Care Practice on Patient
and Healthcare Outcomes? A Scoping Review.
February 2015
Data Collection Role for Pharmacothearpy Resident Research
Saagar Akundi, Greg Perry, Young R. Lee, David S. Fike,
Sofia Mnjoyan; Does vitamin C prevent acute kidney injury
in patients receiving vancomycin?
Sept 2013-
March 2014
HEALTH FAIRS & PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT
Agape Dream Center Health Fair (Medical Center Hospital) April 2016
Permian Basin Health Fair (Medical Center Hospital) October 2015
Nursing Home Blood Pressure Assessment Health Fair March 2015
ASHP Clinical Skills Semi-finalist Midyear Clinical Meetin December 2014
TTSSHP/ASHP Clinical Skills TTUHSC SOP Winner October 2014
TTSSHP Campus Clinical Skills Finalist October 2014
TTUHSC SOP/School of Nursing Trauma Day Simulation July 2014
TSHP 2014 Annual Seminar Disease State Management participant April 2014
TSHP 2014 Annual Seminar Clinical Skills Competition participant April 2014
Texas Pharmacy Association (TPA) Counseling Competition 2013, 2014
Geriatric Elective April 2014-May 2014
TPA Self-Care Competition participation March 2014
Ambulatory Care Elective Feb 2014-March 2014
Advanced Infectious Disease Elective Feb 2014-March 2014
TTSSHP Campus Clinical Skills Finalist October 2013
TPA Self-Care Championship Finalist July 2013
Over the Counter Medication Counseling Health Fair March 2013
Cholesterol Screening Health Fair April 2013
TTUHSC SOP Leadership Summit August 2012
14. Erica Wilson CV
Page 14
Flu Clinic, administration September 2012
Glucose Screening Health Fair, triage October 2011
VOLUNTEER & SERVICE CONTRIBUTIONS
Medical Center Hospital Medication Take Back Program July 2015- present
Thanksgiving meal for the homeless- Brinkley Heights Baptist November 2014
Church (Memphis, Tennessee)
March of Dimes 5K 2012, 2013, 2014
Healthcare for Haiti- OTC medication drive Oct 2013-March 2014
Can Food Drive February 2014
Salvation Army Angel Tree 2011, 2012, 2013
Salvation Army Clothes Drive 2012, 2013
Live Nativity Scene- Grace Baptist Church (Andrews, Texas) December 2013
Upside Down Club Buddy Walk October 2013
Run or Dye 5K Participant- Big Brothers Big Sisters August 2013
Buffalo Gap Historic Village 5K Zombie Run Participant December 2012
Texas Tech University School of Pharmacy Fall Festival Oct 2012, 2013, 2014
Texas Tech University Medication Cleanout October 2012
St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital Sept 2011-present
American Heart Association Heart Walk participant 2009, 2010, 2014
Compassion International Child Sponsor June 2008-present