- Joined
- Feb 1, 2007
- Messages
- 35
- Reaction score
- 0
In a thread a few below this one, pharmatope said this:
At this point in time considering where the profession of pharmacy currently is (and not wanting to go into academia), are residencies pointless (from a career standpoint--not considering the knowledge gained)? It seems many inpatient pharmacy hospital staff positions don't require them. Any thoughts?
i compare a clinical pharmacist position to that of a Pathologist. there is usually one per hospital and the people stay for a long time. there isnt a high turnover rate for them. if there is an open position in this market, they do not want fresh out of residency people, they want someone who is board certified and been doing it for a while. this is the reality. those clinical positions that your faculty in school talked about and the whole model they preached doesnt really exist.
At this point in time considering where the profession of pharmacy currently is (and not wanting to go into academia), are residencies pointless (from a career standpoint--not considering the knowledge gained)? It seems many inpatient pharmacy hospital staff positions don't require them. Any thoughts?