Required Rotations Sample Clauses

Required Rotations. Orientation (1 month): Orientation to hospital, pharmacy departments, medication distribution systems, computer systems and clinical pharmacy services including clinical policies and procedures. • Internal Medicine 1 (2 months): Provision of pharmaceutical care for general medicine patients on an interdisciplinary rounding service, pharmacokinetic monitoring, clinical intervention documentation, patient counseling, vaccination screening, medication reconciliation, delivery of in-service(s) to physicians and/or nursing staff, precepting APPE students and/or PGY1 residents, and presentations at Internal Medicine conference. • Internal Medicine 2 (2 months): Continuation of Internal Medicine 1 roles and responsibilities with a concentration on autonomy, precepting, and education of pharmacy staff and medical teams. Resident will serve as a primary preceptor for an APPE student completing an acute care inpatient rotation. • Medical Intensive Care (1 month): Participate in the interdisciplinary care of patients in the medical intensive care units (MICU) while rounding with the MICU team, actively monitor antibiotic use, extensive pharmacokinetic drug monitoring, clinical intervention documentation, medication reconciliation, delivery of in-service(s) to physicians and/or nursing staff, and precepting APPE students and/or PGY1 residents. • Infectious Disease (1 month): Participate in daily rounds with the Infectious Diseases consult service, actively monitor antimicrobial use for appropriate indication, dose, duration, route, monitoring and efficacy. Resident will perform extensive pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamics monitoring, dose adjustments, clinical intervention documents, vaccine screening, patient/physician medication-related education as needed, and precept APPE students and/or PGY1 residents. • Elective Rotations (4, 1 month): Emergency Medicine, Medical Oncology, Nutrition, Stroke Service, Ambulatory Care Clinic opportunities (HIV, Geriatrics, Internal Medicine), Solid Organ Transplant (KentuckyOne Health – Jewish Hospital), Cardiology (KentuckyOne Health – Jewish Hospital), Academia (Xxxxxxxx University College of Pharmacy) Longitudinal Rotations
AutoNDA by SimpleDocs
Required Rotations. Orientation/Emergency Medicine 1 (2 months): Orientation to the hospital, pharmacy departments, medication distribution systems, computer systems, and clinical pharmacy services including policies and procedures. Resident will also be oriented to University of Louisville Emergency Department policies and procedures and provide provision of pharmaceutical care for the emergency medicine patients, pharmacokinetic dosing, clinical intervention documentation, patient counseling, vaccination screening, medication reconcilliation, and precepting APPE students and/or PGY1 residents. During these 2 months, resident will focus on trauma related topics and obtaining BLS/ACLS if not previously certified. • Emergency Medicine 2 (1 month): Continuation of Emergency Medicine 1 roles and responsibilities with a concentration on autonomy and infectious disease and antimicrobial stewardship in the emergency department. • Emergency Medicine 3 (1 month) Continuation of Emergency Medicine 1 and 2 roles with a focus on special populations not discussed in previous rotations to include, but not be limited to pregnancy, pediatrics, geriatrics, etc. • Community Emergency Medicine 1 (1 month, Jewish Hospital): Participate in the interdisciplinary care of emergency medicine patients in a community setting to add on to learning experiences from Emergency Medicine 1 with a disease state focus of cardiology to include both acute and critical care patients. • Emergency Medicine Transitions of Care (1 month): Provision of patient care to emergency department patients with plans for discharge. Clinical components will include obtaining medication history, discharge medicaiton reconciliation, medicaiton counseling, collaborative care with physicians, nursing staff, and social work through utilization of Meds to Beds program to service all patients filling their medicaitons throught University Medical Center outpatient pahramcy. • Critical Care (2 months, Medical and Surgical ICU): Participate in the interdisciplinary care of patients in the medical and surgical intensive care units while rounding with the MICU or Trauma team, actively monitor antibiotic use as part of the Antimicrobial team, extensive pharmacokinetic drug monitoring, clinical intervention documentation, medication reconciliation, delivery of in-service(s) to physicians and/or nursing staff, and precepting APPE students and/or PGY1 residents. • Management/Medication Safety (1 month): Participate in staff planning activitie...
Required Rotations. Orientation (1 month): Orientation to hospital, pharmacy departments, medication distribution systems, computer systems and clinical pharmacy services including clinical policies and procedures.
Required Rotations. Orientation (1 month): Orientation to hospital, pharmacy departments, medication distribution systems, computer systems and clinical pharmacy services including clinical policies and procedures. • Ambulatory Internal Medicine Clinic (12 months): Provision of pharmaceutical care for general medicine patients in an interdisciplinary primary care resident clinic. • Diabetes MTM Clinic (12 months): Pharmacist-run clinic providing medication therapy management to employees of University Medical Center who have diabetes. • Anticoagulation Clinic (5 months): This longitudinal experience will enable the resident to provide comprehensive anticoagulation care in an outpatient clinic setting. • Lung Transplant Clinic – (5 months): Interprofessional clinic within Jewish Hospital, focusing on lung transplant. • Oncology Outpatient Clinic (3 months): Provision of pharmaceutical care for general medicine patients in interdisciplinary oncology clinics. • HIV Clinic I (3 months): Interprofessional clinic where pharmacists see patients individually and with providers, with collaborative prescribing authorities related to antiretroviral therapy management for patients with HIV, pre-exposure prophylaxis for high- risk patients who are HIV-negative, and hepatitis C management for patients who are HIV- infected. • Advanced Heart Failure Clinic I (3 months): Opportunity to work with advanced heart failure patients in an interprofessional clinic at Jewish Hospital. • New Ambulatory Service (12 months): The resident-run ambulatory care experience could be located within the University of Louisville Medical Center, although other opportunities for practice setting development may be possible. • Administration (12 months): Administration is designed to bestow upon the resident the tools, processes and techniques to initiate manage and develop expertise in the management of an ambulatory care practice. • Flipped-Model Research Project (12 months): This experience involves completion of an outcomes research project of interest to the resident and/or University of Louisville Health Care. The required research project shall be directed toward useful outcomes towards improvement of patient care at University of Louisville Health Care. Within the flipped- model structure, residents will be given the opportunity to begin their year with an IRB- approved project, allowing them to immediately start data collection and analysis. Residents will then present a completed project at Midyear and G...
Required Rotations. Orientation (1 month): Orientation to hospital, pharmacy departments, medication distribution systems, computer systems and clinical pharmacy services including clinical policies and procedures. • Ambulatory Internal Medicine Clinic (12 months): Provision of pharmaceutical care for general medicine patients in an interdisciplinary primary care resident clinic. • Diabetes MTM Clinic (12 months): Pharmacist-run clinic providing medication therapy management to employees of University Medical Center who have diabetes. • Anticoagulation Clinic (12 months): This longitudinal experience will enable the resident to provide comprehensive anticoagulation care in an outpatient clinic setting. • Oncology Outpatient Clinic (3 month): Provision of pharmaceutical care for general medicine patients in interdisciplinary oncology clinics. • HIV/550 Clinic (3 months): Interprofessional clinic where pharmacists see patients infected with HIV individually and with providers, with collaborative prescribing authorities. • First Care/Emergency Medicine (3 months): Provision of pharmaceutical care for patients presenting for urgent and emergent care at the hospital’s emergency room. • Transplant Clinics – Liver, Kidney, Lung (3 months): Interprofessional clinic within Jewish Hospital, focusing on solid organ transplant. • New Ambulatory Service (12 month): The resident-run ambulatory care experience could be located within the University of Louisville Medical Center, although other opportunities for practice setting development may be possible. • Administration (12 month): Administration is designed to bestow upon the resident the tools, processes and techniques to initiate manage and develop expertise in the management of an ambulatory care practice.

Related to Required Rotations

  • Forecasting Requirements 19.5.1 The Parties shall exchange technical descriptions and forecasts of their Interconnection and traffic requirements in sufficient detail necessary to establish the Interconnections necessary for traffic completion to and from all Customers in their respective designated service areas.

  • Contract Changes Changes may not be made in the terms and conditions of this contract without the agreement and written permission of the Director of Residence Life or the Director’s designee.

  • Metering Requirements Seller shall comply with all applicable rules in installing a meter appropriate for deliveries pursuant to the Full Buy/Sell or Excess Sale arrangement selected in paragraph 2.2, above, which can be electronically read daily by:

  • Staffing Requirements Licensee will be in full compliance with the main studio staff requirements as specified by the FCC.

  • Child Abuse Reporting Requirements A. Grantees shall comply with child abuse and neglect reporting requirements in Texas Family Code Chapter 261. This section is in addition to and does not supersede any other legal obligation of the Grantee to report child abuse.

Time is Money Join Law Insider Premium to draft better contracts faster.