Common use of Elective Rotations Clause in Contracts

Elective Rotations. Palliative Care (one month) o The palliative medicine interdisciplinary team consists of the attending physician, oncology pharmacy resident, nurse practitioner, chaplain, psychologist, and other learners. The oncology pharmacy resident is expected to provide clinical pharmacy recommendations for consult patients. The resident will participate in daily patient care rounds with the palliative medicine team and is responsible for identifying and resolving any medication-related issues. The resident is expected to act as a liaison and communicate recommendations and interventions to the clinical pharmacist of the patient’s primary team. The patient population treated by the palliative medicine service includes patients with solid tumors, hematologic malignancies, hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) recipients as well as non-hematologic/oncologic conditions. The resident is expected to round 5 days a week. • Infectious Diseases (one month) o Participates in daily rounds with the Infectious Diseases consult service that provides consultative services to patients within the entire hospital system, actively monitor antibiotic use for drug appropriateness, dosing, duration, route, monitoring and efficacy, communicate ongoing patient information/labs to team on a daily basis, extensive pharmacokinetic drug monitoring, pharmacodynamic dosing adjustments, clinical intervention documentation, vaccine screening, and patient/physician medication-related education as needed. The resident is expected to round 5 days a week. • Pediatric Oncology (one month) o The practice area is located at Norton Children’s Hospital. The resident is expected to provide clinical pharmacy services to all patients on the pediatric oncology service. The resident will participate in daily patient care rounds with the pediatric oncology team and is responsible for identifying and resolving any medication-related issues. The pediatric oncology multidisciplinary team consists of a pediatric oncology attending physician, nurse practitioners, medical resident(s), pediatric oncology pharmacist, oncology pharmacy resident and medical and/or pharmacy student(s). The patient population treated by the pediatric oncology service includes pediatric hematologic disorders, pediatric malignancies and hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) recipients. Malignancy types most commonly cared for by the service include acute leukemia, lymphoma, sarcoma, and neuroblastoma and non-malignant blood disorders (hemophilia, aplastic anemia, sickle cell anemia, and ITP). The resident is expected to round 6 days a week. • Geriatrics (one month) o The geriatrics elective is a dedicated month of experience where the resident works with a multidisciplinary health care team in a variety of practice settings, including an ambulatory geriatric clinic, inpatient service and long-term care. The goal of the rotation is to educate the resident on the care of the elderly and the pharmacist’s role in optimizing therapy to decrease medication related adverse events. The resident actively participates in patient care rounds and is expected to perform the same duties as the geriatric pharmacy specialist. • Multimodality (one month) o This multimodality elective rotation is a dedicated month of experience where the resident will collaborate with various healthcare teams to experience the oncology patient’s overall treatment plan. The healthcare teams include but not limited to radiation oncology, palliative care, surgery oncology, colorectal surgery, rehabilitation medicine, and interventional radiology. They will attend outpatient clinics and operating rooms as dictated by the discipline. While on palliative care, the resident will attend daily rounds and develop evidence-based treatment plan with the team. • Clinical Infusion (one month) o Infusion- clinical elective rotation is a 1 month learning experience. The clinical infusion pharmacist will be a hybrid position with both clinical and staffing responsibilities. The pharmacist will work in collaboration with the staffing pharmacist, pharmacy technicians, nurses, physicians, and research coordinators in reviewing labs, processing orders, and documenting chemotherapy dispensed. The pharmacist will also work in collaboration with physicians, nurse clinicians, ambulatory care clinical pharmacists, medication access coordinators, and research coordinators to ensure accurate chemotherapy dosing, and supportive care measures. The pharmacist will serve as an educational liaison for both patient and nurses in the infusion center. • Academia (one month) o The Academic rotation is a 1-month elective rotation at Xxxxxxxx University College of Pharmacy (SUCOP). SUCOP is a 3-year, accelerated Doctor of Pharmacy program that educates approximately 300 students on an annual basis through both the didactic and experiential curricula. Pharmacy residents will perform didactic teaching in both large and small group settings, as well as precept students on academic APPE rotations. In addition to teaching, residents will gain experience in the areas of service, scholarly activity, and leadership. • HIV (one month) o This rotation is a 1-month elective rotation. The trainee on rotation is part of a multidisciplinary health care team providing care to HIV-infected patients in the 550 clinic. They will work in collaboration with infectious disease physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, pharmacists, social workers, and other clinic staff to provide comprehensive medical care and social services. Most of the trainee's time will be spent learning HIV pharmacotherapy and related topics, providing adherence and medication counseling to patients, documenting patient interactions in the medical record, and answering drug information requests from other healthcare providers. The trainee will be involved in direct patient care activities and interpersonal communications with healthcare providers to learn and refine skills pertinent to the management of HIV-infected patients.

Appears in 2 contracts

Samples: uoflhospital.org, uoflhospital.org

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Elective Rotations. Palliative Care (one month) o The palliative medicine interdisciplinary team consists of the attending physician, oncology pharmacy resident, nurse practitioner, chaplain, psychologist, and other learners. The oncology pharmacy resident is expected to provide clinical pharmacy recommendations for consult patients. The resident will participate in daily patient care rounds with the palliative medicine team and is responsible for identifying and resolving any medication-related issues. The resident is expected to act as a liaison and communicate recommendations and interventions to the clinical pharmacist of the patient’s primary team. The patient population treated by the palliative medicine service includes patients with solid tumors, hematologic malignancies, hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) recipients as well as non-hematologic/oncologic conditions. The resident is expected to round 5 days a week. • Infectious Diseases (one month) o Participates in daily rounds with the Infectious Diseases consult service that provides consultative services to patients within the entire hospital system, actively monitor antibiotic use for drug appropriateness, dosing, duration, route, monitoring and efficacy, communicate ongoing patient information/labs to team on a daily basis, extensive pharmacokinetic drug monitoring, pharmacodynamic dosing adjustments, clinical intervention documentation, vaccine screening, and patient/physician medication-related education as needed. The resident is expected to round 5 days a week. • Pediatric Oncology (one month) o The practice area is located at Norton Children’s Hospital. The resident is expected to provide clinical pharmacy services to all patients on the pediatric oncology service. The resident will participate in daily patient care rounds with the pediatric oncology team and is responsible for identifying and resolving any medication-related issues. The pediatric oncology multidisciplinary team consists of a pediatric oncology attending physician, nurse practitioners, medical resident(s), pediatric oncology pharmacist, oncology pharmacy resident and medical and/or pharmacy student(s). The patient population treated by the pediatric oncology service includes pediatric hematologic disorders, pediatric malignancies and hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) recipients. Malignancy types most commonly cared for by the service include acute leukemia, lymphoma, sarcoma, and neuroblastoma and non-malignant blood disorders (hemophilia, aplastic anemia, sickle cell anemia, and ITP). The resident is expected to round 6 days a week. • Geriatrics (one month) o The geriatrics elective is a dedicated month of experience where the resident works with a multidisciplinary health care team in a variety of practice settings, including an ambulatory geriatric clinic, inpatient service and long-term care. The goal of the rotation is to educate the resident on the care of the elderly and the pharmacist’s role in optimizing therapy to decrease medication related adverse events. The resident actively participates in patient care rounds and is expected to perform the same duties as the geriatric pharmacy specialist. • Multimodality (one month) o This multimodality elective rotation is a dedicated month of experience where the resident will collaborate with various healthcare teams to experience the oncology patient’s overall treatment plan. The healthcare teams include but not limited to radiation oncology, palliative care, surgery oncology, colorectal surgery, rehabilitation medicine, and interventional radiology. They will attend outpatient clinics and operating rooms as dictated by the discipline. While on palliative care, the resident will attend daily rounds and develop evidence-based treatment plan with the team. • Clinical Infusion (one month) o Infusion- clinical elective rotation is a 1 month learning experience. The clinical infusion pharmacist will be a hybrid position with both clinical and staffing responsibilities. The pharmacist will work in collaboration with the staffing pharmacist, pharmacy technicians, nurses, physicians, and research coordinators in reviewing labs, processing orders, and documenting chemotherapy dispensed. The pharmacist will also work in collaboration with physicians, nurse clinicians, ambulatory care clinical pharmacists, medication access coordinators, and research coordinators to ensure accurate chemotherapy dosing, and supportive care measures. The pharmacist will serve as an educational liaison for both patient and nurses in the infusion center. • Academia (one month) o The Academic rotation is a 1-month elective rotation at Xxxxxxxx University College of Pharmacy (SUCOP). SUCOP is a 3-year, accelerated Doctor of Pharmacy program that educates approximately 300 students on an annual basis through both the didactic and experiential curricula. Pharmacy residents will perform didactic teaching in both large and small group settings, as well as precept students on academic APPE rotations. In addition to teaching, residents will gain experience in the areas of service, scholarly activity, and leadership. • HIV (one month) o This rotation is a 1-month elective rotation. The trainee on rotation is part of a multidisciplinary health care team providing care to HIV-infected patients in the 550 clinic. They will work in collaboration with infectious disease physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, pharmacists, social workers, and other clinic staff to provide comprehensive medical care and social services. Most of the trainee's time will be spent learning HIV pharmacotherapy and related topics, providing adherence and medication counseling to patients, documenting patient interactions in the medical record, and answering drug information requests from other healthcare providers. The trainee will be involved in direct patient care activities and interpersonal communications with healthcare providers to learn and refine skills pertinent to the management of HIV-infected patients.

Appears in 2 contracts

Samples: uoflhospital.org, uoflhospital.org

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Elective Rotations. Palliative Care (one month) o The palliative medicine interdisciplinary team consists of the attending physician, oncology pharmacy resident, nurse practitioner, chaplain, psychologist, and other learners. The oncology pharmacy resident is expected to provide clinical pharmacy recommendations for consult patients. The resident will participate in daily patient care rounds with the palliative medicine team and is responsible for identifying and resolving any medication-related issues. The resident is expected to act as a liaison and communicate recommendations and interventions to the clinical pharmacist of the patient’s primary team. The patient population treated by the palliative medicine service includes patients with solid tumors, hematologic malignancies, hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) recipients as well as non-hematologic/oncologic conditions. The resident is expected to round 5 days a week. • Infectious Diseases (one month) o Participates in daily rounds with the Infectious Diseases consult service that provides consultative services to patients within the entire hospital system, actively monitor antibiotic use for drug appropriateness, dosing, duration, route, monitoring and efficacy, communicate ongoing patient information/labs to team on a daily basis, extensive pharmacokinetic drug monitoring, pharmacodynamic dosing adjustments, clinical intervention documentation, vaccine screening, and patient/physician medication-related education as needed. The resident is expected to round 5 days a week. • Pediatric Oncology (one month) o The practice area is located at Norton Kosair Children’s Hospital. The resident is expected to provide clinical pharmacy services to all patients on the pediatric oncology service. The resident will participate in daily patient care rounds with the pediatric oncology team and is responsible for identifying and resolving any medication-related issues. The pediatric oncology multidisciplinary team consists of a pediatric oncology attending physician, nurse practitioners, medical resident(s), pediatric oncology pharmacist, oncology pharmacy resident and medical and/or pharmacy student(s). The patient population treated by the pediatric oncology service includes pediatric hematologic disorders, pediatric malignancies and hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) recipients. Malignancy types most commonly cared for by the service include acute leukemia, lymphoma, sarcoma, and neuroblastoma and non-malignant blood disorders (hemophilia, aplastic anemia, sickle cell anemia, and ITP). The resident is expected to round 6 days a week. • Geriatrics (one month) o The geriatrics elective is a dedicated month of experience where the resident works with a multidisciplinary health care team in a variety of practice settings, including an ambulatory geriatric clinic, inpatient service and long-term care. The goal of the rotation is to educate the resident on the care of the elderly and the pharmacist’s role in optimizing therapy to decrease medication related adverse events. The resident actively participates in patient care rounds and is expected to perform the same duties as the geriatric pharmacy specialist. • Multimodality (one month) o This multimodality elective rotation is a dedicated month of experience where the resident will collaborate with various healthcare teams to experience the oncology patient’s overall treatment plan. The healthcare teams include but not limited to radiation oncology, palliative care, surgery oncology, colorectal surgery, rehabilitation medicine, and interventional radiology. They will attend outpatient clinics and operating rooms as dictated by the discipline. While on palliative care, the resident will attend daily rounds and develop evidence-based treatment plan with the team. • Clinical Infusion (one month) o Infusion- clinical elective rotation is a 1 month learning experience. The clinical infusion pharmacist will be a hybrid position with both clinical and staffing responsibilities. The pharmacist will work in collaboration with the staffing pharmacist, pharmacy technicians, nurses, physicians, and research coordinators in reviewing labs, processing orders, and documenting chemotherapy dispensed. The pharmacist will also work in collaboration with physicians, nurse clinicians, ambulatory care clinical pharmacists, medication access coordinators, and research coordinators to ensure accurate chemotherapy dosing, and supportive care measures. The pharmacist will serve as an educational liaison for both patient and nurses in the infusion center. • Academia (one month) o The Academic rotation is a 1-month elective rotation at Xxxxxxxx University College of Pharmacy (SUCOP). SUCOP is a 3-year, accelerated Doctor of Pharmacy program that educates approximately 300 students on an annual basis through both the didactic and experiential curricula. Pharmacy residents will perform didactic teaching in both large and small group settings, as well as precept students on academic APPE rotations. In addition to teaching, residents will gain experience in the areas of service, scholarly activity, and leadership. • HIV (one month) o This rotation is a 1-month elective rotation. The trainee on rotation is part of a multidisciplinary health care team providing care to HIV-infected patients in the 550 clinic. They will work in collaboration with infectious disease physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, pharmacists, social workers, and other clinic staff to provide comprehensive medical care and social services. Most of the trainee's time will be spent learning HIV pharmacotherapy and related topics, providing adherence and medication counseling to patients, documenting patient interactions in the medical record, and answering drug information requests from other healthcare providers. The trainee will be involved in direct patient care activities and interpersonal communications with healthcare providers to learn and refine skills pertinent to the management of HIV-infected patients.

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: uoflhospital.org

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