Dr. Patrick Malone is Professor and Assistant Dean for Internal Affairs at the University of Findlay. Dr. Malone graduated from Albany College of Pharmacy with a B.S. in Pharmacy degree and later obtained a Doctor of Pharmacy degree from the University of Michigan. He completed an American Society of Health-Systems Pharmacists accredited residency in clinical pharmacy at Buffalo General Hospital, a specialty fellowship in drug information at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, and the U.S. West Fellowship at Creighton University in advanced use of computers in education.
Dr. Malone has also been active on a national level in the field of drug information. He is the first author on Drug Information - A Guide for Pharmacists, which is now in its third edition. He has been on the Executive Committee for the Consortium for the Advancement of Medication Information Policy and Research since 1996 and active in setting up and running all of the functions of that group that represents many institutional and academic drug information experts. He was named a Fellow of the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists in 1999. Most recently, he is an editor of Pharmacotherapy Principles and Practice.
Genevieve Ness
Zara Risoldi Cochrane
Katie Wallace
Amy Wilson
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Dr. Patrick Malone is Professor and Assistant Dean for Internal Affairs at the University of Findlay. Dr. Malone graduated from Albany College of Pharmacy with a B.S. in Pharmacy degree and later obtained a Doctor of Pharmacy degree from the University of Michigan. He completed an American Society of Health-Systems Pharmacists accredited residency in clinical pharmacy at Buffalo General Hospital, a specialty fellowship in drug information at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, and the U.S. West Fellowship at Creighton University in advanced use of computers in education.
Dr. Malone has also been active on a national level in the field of drug information. He is the first author on Drug Information - A Guide for Pharmacists, which is now in its third edition. He has been on the Executive Committee for the Consortium for the Advancement of Medication Information Policy and Research since 1996 and active in setting up and running all of the functions of that group that represents many institutional and academic drug information experts. He was named a Fellow of the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists in 1999. Most recently, he is an editor of Pharmacotherapy Principles and Practice.
Describe and recommend new services and methods used by drug information specialists and centers.
Design a system to apply such new services and methods in their situations.
Evaluate the importance of these methods in their practice environments.