Title: Clinical Pharmacy Education-Community Pharmacy Internship
1Clinical Pharmacy Education-Community Pharmacy
Internship
Charles Lee, PhD Professor of Pharmaceutical
Sciences Lloyd L. Gregory School of Pharmacy Palm
Beach Atlantic University West Palm Beach, FL
2Evolution of US Pharmacy Education
- 1821 PCP BS program
- 1950 USC 1st PharmD program
- 1960 UCSF 2nd PharmD program
- 1960-2000 BS/PharmD duel track or BSPharmD
add-on for most pharmacy schools - 2000 ACPE accredits PharmD program only
- 1975 Curriculum begins to increases focus on
clinical - Pharmacy practice transforms from product
orientation to patient orientation - Dichotomous practice models still exist
3Pharmaceutical Care
- 1975 Mikeal et al
- Pharmaceutical Care is the care that a given
patient requires and receives which assures
rational drug usage
4Pharmaceutical Care
- 1992 Strand et al
- Pharmaceutical Care is that component of
pharmacy practice which entails the direct
interaction of the pharmacist with the patient
for the purpose of caring for that patients
drug-related needs
5Pharmaceutical Care
- 1993 ASHP
- Pharmaceutical Care is the direct, responsible
provision of medication related care for the
purpose of achieving definite outcomes that
improve a patients quality of life
6 Pharmaceutical Care
- 1996 APhA
- Pharmaceutical Care is a patient-centered,
outcomes-oriented pharmacy practice that requires
the pharmacist to work in concert with patient
and the patients other healthcare providers to
promote health, to prevent disease, and to
assess, monitor, initiate and modify medication
use to assure that drug therapy regimens are safe
and effective
7Pharmacist- Formulation Scientist
John Stith Pemberton
8Coca Cola Formula
- Invented in 1886
- 5 cents/glass
- 9 drinks/day
- 25 gallon/1st yr
- Sold in 1888 2,300
- Sold in 1923 25 mm
- 2009 market value125 bb
9Pharmacist Provided MTM
- Comprehensive or targeted Medication Therapy
Reviews - Adherence Reviews-based on number or type of
medications - Targeted Medication Intervention Program
- High alert or high cost medications
- Targeted population (geriatrics or pediatrics)
- Disease State Management
- Interdisciplinary approach to achieve
therapeutic goals - Diabetes, cholesterol, asthma
- Health and wellness services
- Immunization
- Wellness screening
- Smoking cessation
- Weight management
10Payer Perspective on Return on Investment
- APhA Survey for MTM program from 10 Respondents
(2008) - ROI ranged from 21 to 121 (median31)
- 700,000/yr saving for 200 patients for insurer
- 4.5 mm/yr for self-insured employer
11ACPE
- 1932 ACPE was established for the accreditation
of pharmacy education - 1975 Expanded its scope of activity to include
accreditation of continuing pharmacy education. - 1999 developed standards for certificate programs
in pharmacy. - 2000 Recognized Doctor of Pharmacy as the only
accredited pharmacy degree program - 2003 Name changed to the Accreditation Council
for Pharmacy Education in 2003. - 2007 Revised standards, 30 standards, 3
Appendices
12ACPE Mission and Philosophy
- Establish standards and criteria for the
accreditation of pharmacy education program,
continuing education program and pharmacist
certification program - Promote continuous quality improvement and
encouraging innovation in pharmacy education - Consult and assist in the development of learning
outcomes and assessment of professional
competencies
13Standards 2007 Areas of Emphasis
- STD 13 Curricular core-knowledge, skills,
attitude, values - STD 14 Pharmacy practice experiences
- STD 15 Assessment and evaluation of student
learning and curricular effectiveness - STD 19 Progression of students
- STD 24, 25 Faculty and staff-quantitative and
qualitative factor - STD 29 Library and educational resources
14 Pharmacy Curriculum
- Basic Biomedical Sciences
- Pharmaceutical Sciences
- Social, Behavioral and Administrative Sciences
- Clinical Sciences
- Electives
- Pharmacy Practice Experiences
15Standards for Pharmacy Practice Experiences
- Standard No. 14 Curricular Core-Pharmacy
Practice Experiences - The school must provide a continuum of required
and elective pharmacy practice experiences
throughout the curriculum to support the
achievement of professional competencies - The pharmacy practice experiences must integrate,
apply, reinforce, and advance the knowledge
skills, attitudes and values developed through
the other components of the curriculum - The pharmacy practice experience must include
direct interaction with diverse patient
populations in a variety of practice settings and
involve collaboration with other health care
professionals - Required IPPE (gt300 hours), APPE (gt1400
hours) - Electives
16IPPE Standards Guideline 14.4
- Minimum 300 hours over 3 years (P1-P3)
- Involve actual practice experiences in community
and institutional settings - Assume direct patient care responsibilities under
appropriate supervision - Early sequencing in the curriculum
- Interface with didactic course work
- Provide introduction to the profession, leading
to entry into APPE
17IPPE Program- Content Example 1
- Community pharmacy
- Institutional pharmacy
- Community service and medical missions
- Clinical pharmacy
- Community patient-centered care
- Geriatrics
18IPPE Program- Content Example 2
- First year service learning experience
- Second year practice skills experience
- Third year Patient care experience
19IPPE Program- Content Example 3
- Early pharmacy education with community teachers
- Mentoring program
- Community practice
- Institutional practice
- Pharmaceutical care clinic
20IPPE Program- Content Example 4Rite Aid
Internship
- Year 1
- Defining the Rite Aid Internship
- Rite Aid pharmacy computer system (NEXGEN),
HIPAA, CIA and Rite Aid policies and procedures. - Pharmacy professionalism
- Year 2
- Inventory management
- Dispensing practices
- Automation
- Third party training
21IPPE Program- Content Example 4 Rite Aid
Internship
- Year 3
- Pharmacy workflow
- Clinical Services
- Third Year Intern Project
- Mentor 1st or 2nd year Rite Aid Intern
- Business of Pharmacy
- Year 4
- Learning the profit loss system
- Mentoring a 3rd year Rite Aid Intern
- Fourth Year Special project
- Learning Pharmacy Manager responsibilities
22IPPE Program- Content Example 5Walgreens
Pharmacy
- Prescription Medications
- OTC products
- Herbal products
- Patient counseling guidelines
- Disease state information
- Pharmacy Law and Ethics
- Management of Pharmacy
23Commonality and Differences
- Pharmacy program- 6yr vs 24
- College setting-medical center affiliated vs
independent - Site setting-community vs institutional
- Site availability-region dependent
- Site specialty
- State law dictates time to start internship
- Structured vs episodic learning?
- Partially fulfilled by simulation program?
24Course Designation and Contents
- Sch 1 PHAR 530, 532, 538
- Sch 2 IPPE 101, 103, 201, 301, 303
- Sch 3 PHR1242, 2112, 3232
- Community
- Institution
- Patient care
25Course Syllabus
- Course description
- Course pre-requisites
- Textbook and other learning materials
- Learning objectives/outcomes
- Measure of outcomes
- Course outline and agenda
- Evaluation
- Course policies and procedures
- Standards of dress and personal appearance
26PHAR 530, 532, 558
- Objectives/Outcomes
- Affirm the role of the pharmacist in the health
care team - Provide ethical patient care
- Promote the safe use of medications
- Perform calculations required to compound,
dispense and administer medications - Identify the most frequently prescribed drugs by
category - Demonstrate effective communications skills
- Evaluate information from resources of the health
care system and integrate it into pharmacy
practice - Promote health improvement, wellness and disease
prevention - Demonstrate critical thinking skills to
facilitate decision making - Examine legal/ethical aspects of patient care
- Describe the process of third-party claims
adjudication - Incorporate technology/informatics into pharmacy
practice - Participate in service learning opportunities
PHAR 532, 558 with additional objectives
27PHAR 530 Objectives/Outcomes
- 8. Promote health improvement, wellness and
disease prevention - Read information found in a patient medication
profile - Assess selected therapeutic outcomes, including
pulse rate and blood pressure - 9. Demonstrate critical thinking skills to
facilitate decision making - Discuss OTC pharmacotherapy decisions on product
selection with preceptor
28PHAR 530 Course Schedule
- DATE ACTIVITY
- Aug 26 IPPE Orientation, A workbook is provided
to the student with a
list of questions and activities to help guide
the site visit - Sep 02 Criminal background check and HIPAA and
OSHA training - Site Visit 1
- Sep 09 Foundations lab
- Sep 16 Site Visit 2
- Sep 23 Service learning opportunity or
alternate site visit date - Sep 30 Site Visit 3
- Oct 07 Reflection 1 due in LiveText
- What is
professionalism, and why is it important? - Site Visit 4
- Midpoint IPPE evaluations should be completed
in EMS - Oct 14 Fall Break Day/School holiday
- Oct 21 Site Visit 5
- Oct 28 IPPE Conference
-
- Dec 9 extended over the semester
29 PHAR 530 Assessment Criteria
- Professionalism and Behavior evaluated by
preceptor - Minimum score 3.0 to pass, but does not count
toward grade - Competency assessment by community practice
preceptor (70) and faculty (30) - Minimum score 3.0 to pass
- Orientation/Conference 1 15
- Conference 2 15
- Medical Terminology 15
- LiveText Reflection 1 10
- LiveText Reflection 2 10
- Workbook Questions/Activities 35
- Total 100
- Preceptor training critical
30PHAR 530 Grading Criteria
- A workbook is provided to the preceptor with a
list of questions and activities to help guide
the site visit - Assessment of professionalism and performance
will be completed in the EMS web-based system by
the Preceptor at the site using a grading rubric
that describes performance requirements - Grading Scale
- Honors 4.75 - 5.00
- High Pass 4.50 - 4.749
- Pass 3.0 - 4.49
- Failure lt3.0
31PHAR 532 Course Schedule
- WK -1 Course Orientation, Campus Conferences
- WK 1 Mon-Fri , 36 hr (4.5 days)
- 1. Orientation to department and site
- 2. Role of pharmacist in health care team
- 3. Interdisciplinary communication
- 4. Provide ethical patient care
- 5. Distribution order processing
- 6. Define and discuss systems management
- 7. Purchasing, Inventory Control
- 8. Discuss Performance Improvement Initiatives
- WK 1 Fri 1-4 pm Conference, Webex conference if
necessary - WK 2 Mon-Fri, 36hr
- 9. Legal Controlled Substances
- 10. Medication Reconciliation
- 11-15
- WK 2 Fri 1-4 pm Conference, Webex conference if
necessary - Intense schedule in 2 weeks (80 hr)
32PHAR 532 Assessment Criteria
- Professionalism and Behavior evaluated by
preceptor - Minimum score 3.0 to pass, but does not count
toward grade - Competency Assessment by institutional practice
preceptor (80) and faculty (20) - Minimum score 3.0 to pass
- Conferences Attendance 20
- Calculations Worksheet 25
- Service Learning Reflection 10
- IPPE Hospital Workbook Content Exam 25
- LiveText Reflections 20
- Total 100
- Preceptor training critical
33PHAR 538 Course Outline
- WK 1-18
- 7 site visits
- 3 on-campus conferences
- Workbook/Assignment activities
- Community service activity at site
- Health care project at site
- Journal site visit, Reflection in LiveText
34PHAR 538 Course Schedule
- Week 1 on campus conference
- Orientation
- LiveText, EMS review, Terminology
- Week 2 Foundations lab
- Week 3 Site Visit 1
- Prior to site visit
- Complete OTC CASE
- Top Rx Drugs
- Drug Information Question
- SITE activities
- 1. Ear Care OTC Products Case
- 2. Begin planning a health promotion activity,
Participate in educational offerings
designed to benefit the health of the general
public - Self Care Diabetes
- Blood Pressure Hypertension
- Cholesterol Hyperlipidemia
- 3. Discuss with Preceptor the patient interview
using edited Script and Form created in
Communications Class. - 4. Ask for a patient to interview or use a
relative or family friend.
35PHAR 538 Assessment Criteria
- Professionalism Behavior Minimum score 3.0 to
pass - Competency Assessment Minimum score 3.0 to pass
- Participation/Attendance Conference 1
- Develop Conflict Management Script, hand in
scenario 20 - Participation/Attendance Conference 2
- Management, hand in organization chart 10
- REFLECTIONS 20
- Patient Interview 10
- Service Learning Reflection 10
- Management Overview Reflection 10
- Workbook Activities Completion 10
- Terminology Quizzes 10
- Total 100
- Use LiveText or Blackboard for documentation
36IPPE 101/IPPE 103 Course Outcomes
- Same eight (8) performance outcomes
- Different settings 101 (community), 103
(institution) - Outcome 2 Given a patient, caregiver, or health
care - professional, conduct an interview to collect
subjective - information required for professional functions
at the - practice site.
- Activities to achieve outcome
- Elicit patient-specific information necessary for
processing prescriptions/medication orders. - Ask appropriate questions to clarify subjective
information. - Accurately document subjective information.
37IPPE 101- Community Practice
- Site based activity Points
- Community Experience (1 wk, 40 hr) 70
- (Preceptor Evaluation)
- School based activity 30
- Orientation
- Web based tutorial
- Assignment/Project
- Total points 100
38IPPE 103- Institutional Practice
- Site based activity Points
- Institutional Experience (1 wk, 40 hr) 70
- (Preceptor Evaluation)
- School based activity 30
- Orientation
- Web based tutorial
- Assignment/Project
- Total points 100
39Assessment Criteria
- Categorical/Numerical (MC/10, NI/8, SD/0)
- Meets Competency (MC-10 points)
- Sometimes needs assistance to complete criterion
elements. - Needs Improvement (NI-8 points)
- Usually needs assistance to complete criterion
elements. - Significant Deficiency (SD-0 points)
- Always or nearly always needs assistance to
complete criterion elements - Grade
- 90 100 A
- 80 89 B
- 70 79 C
- lt 70 F
40Professionalism and Behavior Criteria
- Items
- Patient and provider communication
- Appearance, attire
- Timeliness, commitment
- Initiative
- Pass/Fail, does not count toward grade
- Meets Competency
- Significant Deficiency
- SD may contribute to failing course
41IPPE 201-Patient Care I
- Min 50 hr during the 2nd year
- 2-3 students/group
- 6 assignments
- Course Outcomes
- Develop pharmacist-patient relationship
- Collect pharmaceutical care database
- Develop problem list
- Make appropriate health care recommendations
(under guidance of preceptor)
42IPPE 201 Assessment
- Preceptor evaluation 80 of course grade
- Assignment Assessment Activity Points
- 1 Database Collection 10
- 2 Medication History and Personal Medication
Record 15 - 3 Vital Signs/ ROS/Problem List 15
- 4 SOAP note 15
- 5 15-minute Patient Case Presentation 15
- 6 Supervised Interview 10
- Course master evaluation 20 of the course grade
- Workshop Participation
- Medication history, documentation (e.g., SOAP
note) 14 - Course Closure Activities
- Reflection Paper 6
- Total Points for the Course 100
43IPPE 301-Patient Care II
- Min 50 hr during the 3rd year
- 5 assignments
- Course Outcomes
- Engage in the process of providing Medication
Therapy Management (MTM) services - Learn to identify and assess medical and
medication-related problems. - Develop, implement, and follow-up on
recommendations for identified problems in
collaboration with their preceptor and other
healthcare providers. - Develop communication skills with other members
of the healthcare team.
44IPPE 301 Assessment Criteria
- Preceptor evaluation 60 of course grade
- Assignment Assessment Activity Points
- 1 Supervised Interview 12
- 2 Medication Therapy Review with problem list
16 - 3 SOAP Note with Cover Letter
- Medication Action Plan
- Personal medical record (PMR) 16
- 4 F/U SOAP Note Updated PMR 16
- Course Master evaluation 40 of the course grade
- 5 Health Fair Poster Session 10
- Workshop Activities Participation 20
- Complete Student Portfolio (midpoint
final) 10 - Total Points for the Course 100
45IPPE 303 Community Pharmacy Practice
- Min 160 hr in 4 wk during the 3rd yr
- Six (6) terminal performance objectives
- 5. Identify five potential elements of
medication error prevention at the practice site,
using ISMP recommendations. - Access at least weekly the ISMP FDA Safety
Alerts. - Describe issues related to dangerous
abbreviations, high alert medications, and look
alike/sound alike medications. - Discuss with the preceptor each of the five
safety issues identified and possible solutions. - Post in Blackboard two safety intervention
assignments. - The interventions can be for an individual or the
practice. List the issue and the corrective
action taken.
46IPPE 303 Assessment Criteria
- O Outstanding (10 points) The student is able
to perform all of the skills elements with
minimal - assistance from the preceptor.
- A Acceptable (8 points) The student is able to
perform the skill but requires assistance from
the preceptor for some of the skills elements. - N Not acceptable (0 points) The student is
unable to perform the skill without assistance
from the preceptor for all or most of the skills
elements. - Grade (solely assessed by preceptor)
- 90 100 of 60 points A
- 80 89 of 60 points B
- 70 79 of 60 points C
- lt 70 of 60 points F
47Professionalism and Behavior Criteria
- ITEM 4 Initiative
- Acceptable/Unacceptable, does not count toward
grade - Acceptable
- The student consistently (greater than 90)
- (1) Accepts responsibility and demonstrates
accountability without - repeated reminders
- (2) Demonstrates a sense of duty
- (3) Demonstrates an earnest desire to learn
- (4) Demonstrates the willingness and flexibility
to contribute to the - well-being of others
- (5) Applies knowledge, experience, and skills
to the best of his/her ability. - Unacceptable
- Does not meet criteria for acceptable as stated
above.
48PHR 1242 Community Professional Development I
- Visit 1 Introduction to learning
- Visit 2 Concept of Pharmaceutical care
- HW 2 Component of Rx
- Practice skills
- OTC moment
- Visit 3 Pharmacy workflow
- HW3 Rx label
- Practice skills
- OTC moment
- Visit 4-13
- Visit 7 Midterm Preceptor Evaluation of student
performance - Visit 14 Final Evaluation and Review
49PHR 1242 Community Professional Development I
- HW 3
- Self-study assignment
- Rx label
- Formulations and substitutions
- Pharmacy skills focus
- Information on Rx label
- List 7 drugs in negative formulary
- OTC moment
- Active ingredients in Robitussin, Delsym
- Journal reflection
- How efficient is the workflow at your site?
50PHR 1242 Assessment Criteria
- Assessment of workplace performance (preceptor)
15 - Assessment of professional competency
(preceptor) 15 - Site based assignment 15
- ETR journal and IDK cards 15
- Quizzes 10
- Attendance/dress code(count toward grade) 10
- Case scenarios, class group assignments 20
- Total 100
- Grading scale
- Agt90
- B80-89
- C75-79
- Flt75
51Professionalism and Workplace Performance
15 items, categorical
52PHR 1242Community Practice Competencies
15 items, categorical
53PHR 2112 Institutional Professional Development
II
- Visit 1 Syllabus and Course Overview
- Visit 2 Medication order processing
- Self learning activities
- Professional insight
- Reflection and journal entries
- Visit 3 Hospital Pharmacy automation
- Self learning activities
- Professional insight
- Reflection and journal entries
- Visit 4-10
- No midpoint point evaluation
- Final Evaluation and Review (Grading rubrics the
same)
54PHR 2112 Site Based Learning ActivitiesVisit 3
- Self-learning activities
- Describe the basic process of unit dose drug
distribution in the hospital and how automation
is used - Are nurses able to access drugs from the
automated dispensing machine that do not yet
appear on the patients profile? If so, what
safeguard are in place? - Professional insight
- What do pharmacists consider to be the major
sources of stress in hospital pharmacy? - How do they deal with stress?
- Reflection and journal entries
- Some pharmacists are concerned that automation
may jeopardize job security. What kind of skills
should you develop so that your job will always
be secure, regardless of automation?
55PHR 2112Institutional Practice Competencies
16 items, categorical
56PHR 3232 Professional Development III
- Clinical Pharmacy
- 6 visits, 80 hr
- Geriatrics
- 1 visit 8 hr
- Class meetings wk1-wk16
- 32 hr
- Case presentations
- others
57PHR 3232 Assessment Criteria
- Service learning Projects 45
- Clinical Pharmacy 25
- Geriatric 10
- Case Presentation 10
- Professionalism 25
- Peer Case Evaluation 12
- Electronic Thought Reflection 8
- CV and cover letter 5
- APPE Portfolio 5
58Experiential Training Log
59Student Assessment of Preceptor
60Student Assessment of Preceptors(ACPE Appendix C)
- Ability to facilitate learning
- Communication skills
- Quality as a role model
- Effectiveness related to pharmacy education
61Stake Holders in the Partnership
- ACPE
- School
- Student
- Preceptor/site
62Preceptors Perspective
- Assist with daily activities
- Access to college resources
- Professional growth
- Academic appointments /recognition
- Material/financial rewards (e.g. CE, training,
travel) - Personal satisfaction and gratification of being
a part of pharmacy education - Shape the future of pharmacy practice
- Develop life long mentoring relationships
- Give back to the profession
- Recruitment tool
- Staff development
63Elements of Precepting
- Partnership for education
- Role modeling
- Education
- Coaching
- Evaluation of performance
- Professionalism
- Teamwork
- Investment of time energy
- Individualization of learning activities
- Guidance
64Core Value for Preceptors
- Professionalism
- Desire to educate and share knowledge with
students - Willingness to mentor
- Time commitment for precepting
- Respect for students
- Willingness to work with a diverse student
population
65Preceptor Responsibilities
- Student orientation
- Throughout the internship/rotation
- Guide
- Coordinate
- Instruct
- Role model
- Assess/Evaluate
66School Perspectives
- Engage in the real world of pharmacy practice
(avoid ivory tower syndrome) - Experience cannot be taught in classroom, it
must be practiced and modeled, need preceptor as
the education partner - Marketing students for future employment
- Impart new academic concept onto pharmacy practice
67Recruit Practice Facilities(ACPE Standard No 28)
- Implement criteria for selection
- Select sites and preceptors with established
quality criteria - Execute affiliation agreement between the site
and the school - Preceptor training
- Oversight of preceptor/site for quality assurance
- Explore new preceptor/site for turnover and
replacement
68Preceptors and Sites
- Adequate number of sites
- Diversity of practice facilities
- Preceptors to hold position in school for
commitment - Adjunct faculty practice sites
- University based experiential sites ( medical
center) - College based faculty sites in affiliated
institutions
69Preceptors Training(ACPE Appendix C)
- Orientation to schools mission, goal and value
- Review of schools curriculum and teaching
methodologies - Review of schools IPPE objectives
- Review of schools performance assessment and
grading system - Web based tools and resources
70Preceptors Package
- Syllabus for the course
- Workbook
- Professionalism Assessment Form
- Competency Assessment Form
- Resource access (library, online) information
- System access information (e-mail, LiveText,
Blackboard etc)
71Oversight of Pharmacy Practice Experience (ACPE
Appendix C)
- The experience director is responsible for
oversight and quality assurance of the experience
program - Expertise, credibility and commitment of
preceptor/site - Number of students per site
- Schools should have systems, such as computerized
system to manage the pharmacy practice
experiences - Preceptor/site evaluation by students
72Students Perspective
- Need experience before taking on the real
practice world - Expressed willingness/enthusiasm for learning
- Personal accountability and responsibility for
actions - Dependability and reliability
- Effective use of time and resources
- Courteous, respectful and non-judgmental
communication with preceptors, patients, staff
and fellow students - Agent for change in pharmacy practice for the
future
73Continued Evolution of Pharmacy Practice
- Economic pressure
- Declining dispensing fee
- Centralized dispensing operation (e.g., mail
order) - Fee for service to patients to improve
profitability (MTM) - Desire to be integrated as a member of the
healthcare team - Put education in good use
- Medication related morbidity and mortality
74Continued Evolution of Pharmacy Practice
- Medication related morbidity and mortality
- 3 -10 of hospital admissions are
medication-related - 1.5 mm preventable medication related adverse
events - Cost-177 bb (yr 2000)
- Pharmacists can play a valuable role in reducing
patient risk.
75Challenges to Patient-Centered Care
- Time consuming third party billing
- Lack of reimbursement model
- Insufficient staffing
- Inability to access patient information
- Lack of private area
- Lack of education program
- www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid
2690893
76References
- Accreditation Standards and Guidelines for the
Professional Program in Pharmacy Leading to the
Doctor of Pharmacy Degree. http//www.acpe-accredi
t.org/pdf/ACPE - American Society of Health-System Pharmacists
Education and Training. - http//www.ashp.org/Import/PRACTICEANDPOLICY/Poli
cyPositionsGuidelinesBestPractices/BrowsebyTopic/E
ducation/PolicyPositions.aspx0315 - VCU School of Pharmacy. http//www.pharmacy.vcu.ed
u/sub/exper/preceptors.aspx - University of Maryland School of Pharmacy
- http//www2.pharmacy.umaryland.edu/administration
/elp/courses.html - Palm Beach Atlantic University Gregory School of
Pharmacy - http//pharmacy.pba.edu
- An enhanced community Advanced Pharmacy Practice
Experience to improve patient care. Am J Pharm
Educ. Kassam and Kwong, 2009 73(2) 25.