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#1 |
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Member
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I think about taking BCPS exam, but I don't know if it's common thing to do for hospital pharmacists without residency training like me. How are you qualified to sit for BCPS without residency? What about other certification/programs that I can obtain as a hospital pharmacist? I looked into APhA and ASHP but haven't found anything, at least anything that's relevant for hospital pharmacist (MTM, Immunization are more for retail & community, I guess)....I heard about Certification for Anticoagulation offered online, is this good? Please share if you have more info about this topic! Thanks! |
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#2 |
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Senior Member
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Congrats on the job! Welcome to the club of hospital pharmacists without a residency. I don't think a residency is required for those exams but I know it is definitely suggested.
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#3 |
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Senior Member
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Well, don't quote me on this since I'm a new grad too but you can still get any BCPS for which you have experience, it will just take you longer without the residency. For instance, you have to work for three years before you can sit for the pharmacotherapy BCPS whereas residents can take it after their residency year.
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#4 |
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Fezzes are cool
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http://www.bpsweb.org/specialties/pharmacotherapy.cfm
From the site, requirements for BCPS:
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Might be a Pharmacist in 2014 AACP's Official Pharmacy School Admissions Requirements Page (Don't know what pre-reqs you need? Go there!) Pearson's Official PCAT Candidate Information Guide (answers many commonly asked questions) |
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#5 |
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Senior Member
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The pharmacist I work with sat for the exam without a residency. It's doable.
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Butler University College of Pharmacy Class of 2016 |
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#6 |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Aug 2005
Posts: 429
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I was in your shoes last year. BCPS is IMO THE certification for clinical hospital pharmacists. I would love to take it now, but alas, now 2 more years before I can prove myself. Based on what I've seen in the BPS review materials, anyone who did well on rotations and keeps up to date with practice guidelines and new lit should be able to ace it.
The main reason I want to sit for BCPS, outside of giving me a challenge, is that if I ever want another job, I feel like I need some objective evidence that I just don't sit around and staff all day, and went the extra mile to show how qualified I am as a clinical pharmacist.I know a couple of pharmacists that are ridiculously awesome and refuse to support the BPS and think it's a scam, but in the absence of other good certification or great work experience I can't really think of anything else that would objectively show that you know what's up. I have gotten emails from ASHP regarding management and clinical type certificate programs specifically targeted to schmucks like me who didn't match, but they seem really lame (since if you were really serious about, say, management you'd just get an MBA). You could try getting other credentials like CDE or flu shots though! Even though that's not really directly relevant to hospital practice I think it's good to know and would definitely boost a CV. |
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#7 |
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Member
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Thanks everyone! I googled a bit and found this link...thought it presented pretty much all the certifications/programs out there for pharmacist.
http://www.michiganpharmacists.org/e...tion/advanced/ @psychoandy: yeah, I do think BCPS is THE ultimate certification that I need to get, but in addition to that 3-year requirement, how do you verify your work (at least 50% providing pharmacotherapy services)? I have a hybrid position right now and it does allow me to do some clinical work even rounding with the team if I want, but I don't know if saying this is like 50% of my work ... the rest I do is mainly distributive tasks i.e. staffing. |
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#8 | |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Aug 2005
Posts: 429
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Quote:
Or you could just lie...if you can pass the test and have no disciplinary record IMO you should be qualified for BCPS. I disagree with some of their stupid rules like not counting unaccredited residency programs as practice experience; that's kind of an f-you to people who didn't match or chose to do harder unaccredited programs. |
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#9 |
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Banned
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This is true, the passing rate is much lower for people without the residency, especially if you haven't been doing pure clinical work in the meantime, although it is doable. I passed it without a residency, but then again there really wasn't much of a point in doing a residency until recently...
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