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HUP?
there's a couple of us working on PGY-2s now who are eyeing those spots.
You just started!!!
HUP?
there's a couple of us working on PGY-2s now who are eyeing those spots.
I've been a PGY-2 for a week today and I'm already getting headhunter calls.
Are you on drugs?
Residency isn't school...it's work. It'll be a cold day in hell when I would allow a distance residency where I'm paying a salary to a resident to sit home and play on the computer all day.
Are you on drugs?
incorrect and i dont appreciate attacks on me. im giving realistic opinions rather than drinking the pharmacy kool-aid. you clearly are still under brainwashing from your school of pharmacy.
you telling me that residency trained people are better than nonresidency? how do you figure? you think that someone with years of experience is not qualified bc they didnt take a 50k paycut to run around doing free work? that is total nonsense. you think that a piece of paper vs 20 yrs of experience makes a difference? pull your head out of your ass.
It seems the people who are strongly against residency are those that have not done one.
I would have to agree with this. 1 year of residency does not a clinician make...
There are many who promote residencies so much in the profession, that it changes the culture just based on word of mouth and perception, but the reality needs to be reexamined.
1 yr residencies alone make little sense. It would be more prudent to simply become a hospital staff pharmacist.
Maybe that is where confusion is setting in. PGY1 is really an extension of your final year rotations with more responsibility and inpatient focus (ignoring amb care/community residencies). The idea is to allow you to evaluate different disciplines of inpatient pharmacy and decide which one to specialize in.
If you have no interest in specializing, why do a residency? In school, this was very clearly explained to us. I have a feeling this is less elucidated elsewhere.
1 yr residencies alone make little sense. It would be more prudent to simply become a hospital staff pharmacist.
Maybe that is where confusion is setting in. PGY1 is really an extension of your final year rotations with more responsibility and inpatient focus (ignoring amb care/community residencies). The idea is to allow you to evaluate different disciplines of inpatient pharmacy and decide which one to specialize in.
If you have no interest in specializing, why do a residency? In school, this was very clearly explained to us. I have a feeling this is less elucidated elsewhere.
It is. 1 year of residency is basically seen as a way to get a staff job easier. That's why I have a problem with them. They are taking spots away from people interested in specialization...and not really doing anything long term...and paying people less out of school.
But, the new trend for the past 10 years has been "clinical/staff" hybrid pharmcist who processes physician orders while doing clinical duties working on the floors. For that role, a year of residency can do a world of good in preparing a pharmacist. Straight out of pharmacy school, I will not put that green pharmacist on the floor unless I train them extensively.
I want to know how you can figure a person running around doing rounds and preparing a poster to present with some staffing on the side is somehow a better candidate for a staffing position than a person that has exclusively done staffing for a year.
I can see how a person with a residency would be a better fit for "clinical" work or whatever you want to call it...but how can anyone honestly tell me that they would make a better staff pharmacist than a person who has exclusively been a staff pharmacist with no other side responsibilities.
It seems the people who are strongly against residency are those that have not done one.
But hey, someone will pay a clinical pharmacist 80K a year, so they must be worth something.
Oh looky... it's Glycerin...
Because of what I typed above, rounding + verifying orders + paging physicians when their orders are wrong and documenting interventions, thus proving our worth + doing multiple monographs/P&T presentations + plus doing an MUE + weekend staffing/clinical + administrative stuff + leading staff development topics + lots of other things I did as a resident = me highly qualified for said hybrid model of pharmacy. In fact, I took a pretty specialized position with just a PGY-1, and almost all of our pharmacists have done a residency and/or have 20+ years of experience.
and other barely tangential roles
WVUPharm2007 said:Are you more qualified to have an anticoag clinic? Sure.
WVUPharm2007 said:But being a generalist staffer? Sorry...I just don't buy it.
So doing some staff pharmacist roles and other barely tangential roles magically makes you better at being a staff pharmacist than a person that during that same period was nothing but a staff pharmacist? Uhhuh...
Are you more qualified to have an anticoag clinic? Sure. But being a generalist staffer? Sorry...I just don't buy it.
Let me answer this.
Does doing a residency help you become a better Meditech order entry pharmacist than a pharmacist without a residency? Maybe not. But order entry isn't everything. In fact, I would consider it a bare minimum hospital pharmacist duty.
Residents spend a lot of time reading mundane journals and guidelines..and should end up with a broader and more comprehesive knowledge of disease management in pharmacotherapy.
Also, protocol and pathway development residents are involved with allows them to have a better understanding of the medication delivery system at a clinical and operational level at the facility.
Because I employ hybrid clinical/staff pharmacist, I believe residency trained pharmacist will be better at identifying and making interventions compared to a fresh grad. It's my opinion based on having worked with and trained many pharmacists.
Order entry is as clinical as it gets. You've got everything you need to make relevant interventions. Diagnosis, drugs, labs, pt history. It's not retail...you check their K+ when putting in a KCL bag...you check their phos when you put in phoslo. I don't think you give it enough respect. That or your expectations are low towards those doing it.
And staffers don't? I did...and still do. Hell, I had a damned notebook with guidelines in it. We had an intraoffice journal club going. And for the sake of argument, let's say they don't...one year of being forced to read journals magically makes someone have a better clinical mind forever? Please.
Of course they are. They have a year of experience. We're talking about the collective experience of residency versus one year of hard staffing strictly towards how good of a staff pharmacist either would make.
Again, reread. We don't do "general staffer" here. All positions are hybrid. But, I wouldn't expect you to buy the concept or the reality that things learned by doing a residency absolutely bumps up the qualification for an applicant for this model of pharmacy; you're much too cynical and/or apathetic. Honestly, I put the info out there for others interested in seeing how a residency will fit into a hybrid model job and to agree with Z and Karm.
You're saying that a person exclusively doing a 50:50 clinical:staff job isn't as prepared on his 366th day of doing the job as a person getting off of a one year residency that walks into the same hospital would be at doing the same job?
I don't know...you'll have to convince me better.
I did order entry for 12 years. C'mon dude..quit it with the elementary electrolyte examples...at least if you're going to talk about electrolytes, talk about Ca++ and need for albumin adjustment.. I'm talking about doing the APACHE II score for Xigris... then convincing the Intensivist why Xigris won't help.. Dosing Argatroban or Lepirudin.... talking to cardiologist why heparin loading dose for AMI should be 60 u/kg instead of 70 u/kg... knowing the iron store before Epo is dispensed.. why Timentin is necessary... or convince docs to use Continuous infusion Zosyn..
So you're studious.. and motivated to learn. How much more would you have learned with a residency.
There's a lot more to pharmacy operation and practice than processing orders. Residents get exposure to activities a typical staff and student don't. Unless you can see the big picture, you will never be convinced of why residency is beneficial.
If you think residency is nothing more than a ploy for cheap labor, you couldn't be more wrong.
I can appreciate that...but I just don't don't see how most of it affects the staffer. The clinical and operations people are usually paid to streamline policy so that we don't have to think about it.
If there is something I'm not considering, give me an example.
I do think it is part of it. Especially for corporations like yours.
Why would you want to hire new grads at full rate when they will be useless for 5-6 months?
You could get them after a yearlong breaking in period. It makes a TON of sense to want to make residencies mandatory on your end.
I wouldn't take a fresh grad and put him/her into a 50:50 clinical role unless they're trained properly. And how long that training will take can vary greatly.
Our corporation does not have a residency. We have hospitals with residency but it has no effect on our corporation as hospital employee salary has nothing to do with us.
Not only useless....dangerous to patient care.
Not my end... every hospital's end. That's why I say do a residency if working inpatient is your goal.
Well, let me just say residents are pain in the ass... like new pharmacists... or anyone that has to be trained... it takes a lot of investment to train a new pharmacist. And when we dole out assignments to residents or pharmacists, it's really much easier for me to do it myself. But in an effort to train and mentor, we go through the motion. But we all have to contribute and hopefully it will enhance our profession.
at what point does a clinical pharmacy resident get over the fact that the full extent of what they can do is just recommend something but NOT not make any real calls?
How is that different from just doing bi*tch work work for the MDs? Most of the times, the "clinical" pharmacist has to look it up in their fancy Apps anyways.
Someone educate me here...
But hey, someone will pay a clinical pharmacist 80K a year, so they must be worth something. So to each his own. Ya...I think residencies are pointless, other than help you get a job.
If anything, such extensive pharmacist involvement may be detrimental to physician training. But it creates job security for pharmacists in those specialties.
Here where I'm doing my PGY-2, certain services would crumple without their clinical pharmacists. Particularly transplant.
I slash and burn clipboard pharmacists who hide out in their office. But I leave transplant pharmacists alone..
You mean its not worth it to pay for them to play freecell for 3 hours a day?
Actually unless they're paid by schools to teach students, typical "clinical clipboard pharmacist" provide very little return on investment.
Here where I'm doing my PGY-2, certain services would crumple without their clinical pharmacists. Particularly transplant.
If anything, such extensive pharmacist involvement may be detrimental to physician training. But it creates job security for pharmacists in those specialties.
However, I feel that pharmacists are severely "clinically" restricted. By definition, pharmacists are not trained to look, poke or touch a patient much like an NP, PA or MD can. The patient assessment has do be done by someone else. As a result, the pharmacist ends up treating the subjective/ objective/ data or numbers gathered by others.
.
I've seen this myself. At my old hospital, I will *never* forget the day when a new cardiologist called me to ask what Avapro was. Avapro! A cardiologist! Turns out...yup...just got done with a residency where the pharmacists took care of all of the pharmacotherapy.
Rather interesting...we are dumbing them all down to make ourselves a necessity. Brilliant!!!![]()
We are all "tethered" to each other in a collaborative environment, so...I'm not really sure how to answer that. 😕 I still have a great deal of autonomy for some things, but ultimately a lot falls back on the prescriber.So, does the residents/ clinical pharmacists in here feel rather autonomous in their day's business? Do they feel tethered to other disciplines to do their work?