The purpose of this position is to provide the services of a licensed pharmacist which includes the
responsibility for the safe and proper distribution and use of medications in inpatients and outpatients who
range in age from neonates, infants less than one year of age, children and adolescents ages 10-18, adults ages 19-65 and the elderly over age 65.
This position is to function at higher decision making and accountability levels regarding medication therapy,
proactive affecting medication use by making recommendations at the time prescribing decisions are being
made or, in some cases, making independent decisions about medication therapy in cooperation with other
healthcare team members. Additional services provided include facilitation of medication reconciliation,
discharge counseling, and medication delivery through coordination of care from admission to discharge. The
pharmacist must possess strong communication skills for patient education and work collaboratively with
inpatient and outpatient interdisciplinary teams including but not limited to providers, nurses, case workers,
pharmacists, and technicians, as well as, the teaching and presenting component of students, interns and/or
residents.
This is a flexible model where coordination of care for the patient as he/she transitions from one aspect of the
medication use system to another is integrated with traditionally centralized functions, such as order
entry/verification. This coordinated care model will continue to evolve as part of an integrated decentralized
patient care practice. This position may be responsible for rotating through several work sites which may
include, but not be limited to Research Pharmacy and Inpatient Adult/Pediatric Hematology/Oncology units.
Interprets and evaluates prescriber's orders and for accuracy, completeness and appropriateness. Documents activities of clinical decision or medication distribution issues that are not in line with the standard of practice, require follow-up, or continued monitoring/evaluation. Verify the accuracy and appropriateness of medications prepared and dispensed from the pharmacy.
Assists in the reconciliation of medications, education of patients regarding their home medication regimens, and coordination of the discharge medication plan with the interdisciplinary team. Documents activities in the patient medical record.
Monitors therapeutic response and adverse effects of medications to guide drug therapy. Consults with provider when questions or problems are identified and documents activies in the patient medical record. Appropriately reports all adverse drug reactions, drug defects, and medication errors.
Responds accurately to requests for drug information from prescribers, nurses, patients and patient's families; independently reviews and interprets the literature and applies this information to specific patient care situations.
Assists in the development of treatment guidelines to be used in patients with specific diagnosis. Documents activities in the patient medical record, pharmacy monitoring profile, drug use evaluation data collection or adverse drug reaction reporting program.
Influences standards of therapy by forming peer level relationships with prescribers and is recognized as the authority on mediations in their practice area by prescribers, nurses and pharmacists.
Participates in both intra and interdepartmental education programs; participates in the development of peers.
Supervise the activities and assume responsibility for all duties being performed by technicians, students, interns, and residents and monitors and evaluates their performance.
Job Related Knowledge, Skills and Abilities (Competencies):
Job Related Knowledge, Skills and Abilities (Competencies):
The pharmacist will experience competing demands from nurses, physicians, pharmacy staff and other healthcare professionals, as they attempt to influence clinical decision-making, clinical policies and practices and work flow. The pharmacist must deal with intense situations on a daily basis. In addition, within the healthcare setting there can be significant lack of control over the work pace, with frequent interruptions (work is often dictated by external factors) that may lead to mental fatigue or stress.
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