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Ambulatory Care Workshop 2008: How to Establish a Pharmacist Managed Clinic
PRESENTER(S):
Click the plus sign to see more detailed information about each speaker.
Dr Armor is currently a Clinical Assistant Professor at the University of Oklahoma College of Pharmacy in Oklahoma City. She received her BS and PharmD degree from the U of Oklahoma. She has worked in primary care clinics in Dallas, Salt Lake City and now Oklahoma City. Her interests include diabetes management and billing/justification for pharmacist services. Go Sooners!
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Dr Brown is employed by Akron General Medical Center’s Department of Pharmacy and acts as a Pharmacotherapy Specialist in the Family Medicine Residency Program. He received his doctorate from Campbell University School of Pharmacy with residency training at the Medical College of Virginia. His current practice is based within a residency program where he also acts as a preceptor for pharmacy and medical students. He received the Golden Apple Teacher of the Year Award multiple times from the Department of Family Medicine and was awarded the William C Kelly Safety Leadership Award by the Ohio Hospital Association. He serves on the boards of the Ohio Patient Safety Institute and Project Learn of Summit County. He is a past president of the Ohio Society of Health-System Pharmacists and recently stepped down as one of the Directors At Large in the Section for Home, Ambulatory and Chronic Care for American Society of Healthsystem Pharmacists.
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Dr. Bulter graduated from Oregon State University with a B.S. in Pharmacy and received her Post-Baccalaureate Doctor of Pharmacy degree from OSU/OHSU. She comleted a specialty residency in Primary Care from Providence Health System in Portland, Oregon, where she then practiced as a clinical pharmacy specialist in primary care for nearly 9 years. She is currently employed by OHSU as a primary care clinical pharmacy specialist and assistant professor of medicine. She also has an Affiliate Faculty appointment with the OSU College of Pharmacy.
Kristy has been a member of ASHP since her time as a student, and is an active member of the Oregon Society of Health-System Pharmacists. She is currently the Immediate-Past President of OSHP. She was appointed to serve on the ASHP Section of Home, Ambulatory, and Chronic Care Practitioners' Section Advisory Group (SAG) on Cognitive Reimbursement Resources in July of 2008.
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Kelly Epplen, Pharm.D., CACP is Clinical Coordinator of Ambulatory Pharmacy Services for the St. Luke Hospitals of Northern Kentucky. Dr. Epplen received her Bachelor of Science and Doctor of Pharmacy degrees from the University of Cincinnati College of Pharmacy in 1995 and 1997 respectively. She maintains a clinical practice as the Director of the St. Luke Hospital Antithrombosis Management Clinic and is a certified Anticoagulation Care Provider. Her current responsibilities include justification, development and implementation of ambulatory clinical programs, provision of direct patient care, and billing and administrative coordination of the Antithrombosis Management Clinics. Dr. Epplen is a program director for the PGY1 Pharmacy Residency Program, and holds the position of Adjunct Clinical Professor at the University of Cincinnati College of Pharmacy.
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Seena Haines,
PharmD, Associate Professor Pharmacy Practice, Residency Director
Seena L. Haines is Associate Professor of Pharmacy Practice and Administration at the Palm Beach Atlantic University (PBAU) Gregory School of Pharmacy and Director of Integrated Pharmacotherapy Services (IPS). She has received grants from Quantum Foundation for the creation of a pharmacist run, indigent clinic for the underserved in Palm Beach County and cultural competency grants from Palm Healthcare Foundation and Allegany for the development of culturally specific patient education. Dr. Haines has received funding from Procter and Gamble for a clinical trial to assess the incidence and prevalence of osteoporosis in Haitian women. More recently, she has received a $500,000, 2-year grant for site replication of the pharmacotherapy model IPS that she developed and serves as Director of Pharmacy Services at four community health centers.
Dr. Haines initiated clinical services for pediatric diabetes prevention and management with the Florida Atlantic University School of Nursing. She is Residency Director for the Pharmacy Practice Residency (PGY-1) with emphasis in ambulatory care and academia. She was selected for the 2004–2005 American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy Inaugural Academic Leadership Fellows Program. Haines completed a postgraduate residency in ambulatory care at Nova Southeastern University and became certified in immunizations and the OTC Advisor program through the American Pharmacists Association.
She serves on the editorial advisory board for Scientific Journals International, Pharmacists Letter, and JAPhA. She is on the national speaker’s bureau of the Tobacco Taskforce: and serves as a national speaker for the immunization training program through the American Pharmacists Association.
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Roger Klotz
• Sandra Leal, PharmD, CDE is the Clinical Pharmacy Supervisor for El Rio Community Health Center in Tucson, Arizona.
• Sandra has been developing a pharmacist managed clinic to target comprehensive diabetes management in underserved populations. She works with various ethnic groups including Hispanic and American Indian populations.
• Sandra earned her Bachelors of Pharmacy and her Doctorate in Pharmacy degrees from the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center in Denver, Colorado.
• She went on to complete a General Practice Pharmacy Residency at the Southern Arizona VA Health Care System in Tucson.
• In addition, she is the first pharmacist in Arizona to receive prescriptive authority and currently serves as the President of the Association of Clinicians for the Underserved (ACU), a national organization.
• Dr. Leal was a recipient the ASHP Best Practices Award in Health-System Pharmacy for the successful implementation of an innovative program which improved the quality of patient care in their health-system.
• Most recently she received the 2007 NACHC Innovative Research in Primary Care Award from the National Association of Community Health Centers.
• Some of her current work has been published in Diabetes Care, The Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved, Insulin Journal, and Advances in Chronic Kidney Disease.
Through her work, Dr. Leal has been vigorously working on issues to address patient safety, health literacy, and reduction of health disparities to improve health care and increases access to vulnerable populations.
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I graduated from St. Louis College of Pharmacy in 2000. I worked in an outpatient pharmacy at Barnes-Jewish Hospital for two years after graduation. While I was there I established 2 clinical pharmacist positions. I helped staff a Coumadin clinic supported by grant funds and I participated in a geriatric clinic. I relocated to central Illinois and switched to inpatient pharmacy. I was a clinical staff pharmacist at a medium size hospital with a strong clinical program. The hospital had a decentralized pharmacist model and I worked on ICU/Step-down, OR and Medical floors. I've been the director of pharmacy at Dr. John Warner Hospital for two years. I became board certified in 2008.
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John Miller
Dr. Edith Nutescu, PharmD, FCCP, Clinical Associate Professor and Director, Antithrombosis Center, University of Illinois at Chicago, College of Pharmacy
Dr. Roller supervises ambulatory clinical pharmacy programs and coordinates ambulatory student and resident rotations at University Health Care in Salt Lake City, Utah. After graduating with a Pharm.D. from the University of Illinois at Chicago in 1990, she went on to do a clinical residency with the West Side VA Medical Center in Chicago. She has since spent time with the Indian Health Service, participated as a member of the Solid Organ Transplant team, contributed to a patient oriented website, practiced in ambulatory care, and managed an anticoagulation clinic. Currently she is actively involved in developing a discharge medication reconciliation/prescription service, MTM, collaborative practice agreements, expanding other clinical programs, and maximizing billing.
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Betsy Shilliday
Amy L Stump, PharmD, BCPS is a 2003 graduate of the University of Nebraska Medical Center College of Pharmacy. She completed a Primary Care Specialty Residency at Mission Hospitals/Mountain Area Health Education Center in Asheveille, NC in 2004. Prior to joining the faculty at the University of Wyoming School of Pharmacy in 2006, Amy taught as Clinical Faculty for the Auburn University Harrison School of Pharmacy.
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