Amphetamines, Barbiturates, and Cocaine: The ABCs of Drug Diversion Detection and Prevention
Track:
Education Sessions (CE)
Program Code: 243-L03
Date: Wednesday, December 8, 2010
Time: 2:00 PM to 4:00 PM EST
Location:
Room 304A, Level 3
PRESENTER(S):
Heidi Bragg, MBA, RPh.
Ryan Forrey, PharmD, MS, Assistant Director, The Ohio Stae University Medical Center
I am currently a pharmacy practice manager that has revised a technician career ladder to accommodate for required pharmacy technician certification.
Karla Miller, PharmD, Director of Medication Usage and Safety, Hospital Corporation of America
Karla M. Miller is the Director of Medication Usage and Safety for Hospital Corporation of America (HCA) in Nashville, Tennessee. She is a board certified psychiatric pharmacists and spent two years as the clinical pharmacist specializing in neuropsychiatry at Centennial Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee. Dr. Miller is an Assistant Professor at the University of Tennessee College Of Pharmacy. She received her Doctor of Pharmacy degree from West Virginia University. She completed a pharmacy practice residency at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland, and a two-year fellowship in neuropsychiatry at The Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio. Dr. Miller is a professional member of ASHP, ACCP, and CPNP.
Scott Savage
Jerry Siegel
PROGRAM CHAIR:
Click the plus sign to see more detailed information about each speaker.
Ryan Forrey, PharmD, MS, Assistant Director, The Ohio Stae University Medical Center
I am currently a pharmacy practice manager that has revised a technician career ladder to accommodate for required pharmacy technician certification.
Apply diversion detection concepts to real-life diversion cases from pharmacy practice managers.
Develop an action plan to implement a controlled substance diversion intervention for a healthcare professional in a hospital.
Identify key technological advances that can be used to detect and prevent drug diversion in a hospital setting.
Recommend appropriate strategies to detect medication diversion in a hospital setting.