I was just wondering if anyone had any idea on what kinds of questions they ask when they stress the interview will be clinical based? anyone have specific examples?
I was just wondering if anyone had any idea on what kinds of questions they ask when they stress the interview will be clinical based? anyone have specific examples?
From what I've heard from pharmacists and/or residents, they often give you a patient case and grill you for a few minutes on how you would treat the patient appropriately. Not sure how specific you can get, it could be anything.... Afib/anticoagulation, ID/antifungals, electrolyte disorders, etc....
yeah that's the thing... what kind of case, like the case similar you saw on NAPLEX? or harder cases?
Know what abx cover MRSA - which of those are available PO. Ditto for pseudomonas. Those are easy clinical questions we ask and you wouldn't believe how many pharmacists look stumped or can only say "Vanco"
We give a patient profile, calculate CrCl. It comes out to 25 ml/min or so - patient is on enoxaparin and rivaroxaban - what recommendations are you going to make?
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I guess they never had to remember those cause you can just look it up? lol
I wouldn't be able to answer a lot of easy questions since I don't have to remember those stuff in retail or can look it up easily... retail drug knowledge and hospital are really different
Part of what makes us useful in the hospital is knowing these things without having to look them up. Doctors and nurses can use the Internet nearly as well as we can, if you have to look everything up without further understanding and nuances, what are you bringing to the table?
Recently when interviewing candidates with minimal to no hospital experience I've been asking more "ok, so you don't know that off the top of your head, but where will you look?"
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I guess they never had to remember those cause you can just look it up? lol
I wouldn't be able to answer a lot of easy questions since I don't have to remember those stuff in retail or can look it up easily... retail drug knowledge and hospital are really different
That is the reason you study for the interview. Things that should be fairly easy (and naming a few drugs that cover MRSA should be) you should be prepared to know for an interview. It amazes me the lack of preparation by "professionals".
have you guys ever hired someone who didn't know his stuff as well as another candidate?
No.
We don't have time to teach basic facts you should have learned in school.
We put a big emphasis on how you will get along with the existing team, and thankfully that person usually is one of the top scorers on our written exam.
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Yikes, a written exam? Can't say I've ever had to do one of those. My first job as a clinical staff pharmacist had a group interview and the clinical guys grilled me a little bit, but not too bad.
The most gruelling interview I ever experienced was at a children's hospital in Texas. It was nearly a full day, probably 6 hours or so, and I think I met every member of the team.. but still no written test.
Know what abx cover MRSA - which of those are available PO. Ditto for pseudomonas. Those are easy clinical questions we ask and you wouldn't believe how many pharmacists look stumped or can only say "Vanco"
We give a patient profile, calculate CrCl. It comes out to 25 ml/min or so - patient is on enoxaparin and rivaroxaban - what recommendations are you going to make?
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Part of what makes us useful in the hospital is knowing these things without having to look them up. Doctors and nurses can use the Internet nearly as well as we can, if you have to look everything up without further understanding and nuances, what are you bringing to the table?
I am not if this is sarcasm or not - but for outpatient tx bactrim is perfectly acceptable"For MRSA? bactrim.
What?
I checked Lexi-Comp. "
Yeah, I know.I am not if this is sarcasm or not - but for outpatient tx bactrim is perfectly acceptable
no worries, at first I thought you might be thinking bactrim wouldn't be used, then I thought, well, who knows. Ya - converting my sarcasm to writing doesn't always work eitherYeah, I know.
I was trying to make a witty illustration that resources can be like spell check on Microsoft word. I.e. understanding context & nuance are important for using them.
Guess it didn't work. LOL
Hah, I had the same response but didn't say anything. I've been out of clinical practice for a year so I thought I might have been rusty.I am not if this is sarcasm or not - but for outpatient tx bactrim is perfectly acceptable
Hah, I had the same response but didn't say anything. I've been out of clinical practice for a year so I thought I might have been rusty.
Hey, just for my clarification, what else could we use? Clindamycin, Zyvox.. what other PO meds could we use for MRSA?
Hah, I had the same response but didn't say anything. I've been out of clinical practice for a year so I thought I might have been rusty.
Hey, just for my clarification, what else could we use? Clindamycin, Zyvox.. what other PO meds could we use for MRSA?
Wait does cefepime not cover enterococcus?
Know what abx cover MRSA - which of those are available PO. Ditto for pseudomonas. Those are easy clinical questions we ask and you wouldn't believe how many pharmacists look stumped or can only say "Vanco"
We give a patient profile, calculate CrCl. It comes out to 25 ml/min or so - patient is on enoxaparin and rivaroxaban - what recommendations are you going to make?
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I hope you realize you shouldn't be on enoxaparin and rivaroxaban at the same time? If you missed that one - chances are a place that uses that exam would disqualify youMRSA - Clindamycin, TMP/SMX , and Doxycycline. I would switch enoxaparin to heparin and as for rivaroxaban, I have no clue. I would look it up on Lexi
I hope you realize you shouldn't be on enoxaparin and rivaroxaban at the same time? If you missed that one - chances are a place that uses that exam would disqualify you
I hope you realize you shouldn't be on enoxaparin and rivaroxaban at the same time? If you missed that one - chances are a place that uses that exam would disqualify you
read the question wrong. Sorry :-(I hope you realize you shouldn't be on enoxaparin and rivaroxaban at the same time? If you missed that one - chances are a place that uses that exam would disqualify you
MRSA - Clindamycin, TMP/SMX , and Doxycycline. I would switch enoxaparin to heparin and as for rivaroxaban, I have no clue. I would look it up on Lexi
read the question wrong. Sorry :-(
Chime in a little bit here: MRSA oral agents to my knowledge includes Bactrim DS, Doxycycline, Clindamycin, Linezolid. But it'd get complicated pretty quick if you have a pt who is pregnant (then Clinda would be the most OK), diabetic (do we need double coverage?), suffering from N/V (Bactrim DS may not sound so good any more?), presenting with SS/Sx of anaerobic co-infection (May we need Flagyl added on?), geriatrics and cannot swallow pill or have an NG tube (should we crush the pills? or simple use the peds liquid of bactrim?) etc.
I've had these situations in real life before though.
bazingaHe would just order a INR level to check if it's safe, DUH
Don't forget hyperkalemia
(Also doxy is fairly straight forward to compound a suspension)