Pharmacy practice
Parkview offers a 12-month American Society of Health-System Pharmacists-accredited PGY1 residency for five residency candidates. Parkview’s PGY1 Pharmacy Residency Program has been an established ASHP-accredited program for 25 years. The Program is designed to develop the resident into an independent, competent, confident and compassionate practitioner with the ability to provide excellent patient care in a variety of practice environments. Residents will develop a core skill set in the areas of:
- Pharmacotherapy evaluation and management
- Patient interaction
- Communication
- Team building
- Time management
In addition, the program will assist residents in developing their leadership skills to fulfill their practice responsibilities and provide care in a technologically advanced environment. Throughout the year, residents will work to develop an effective method of self-evaluation. Residents will learn to balance the demands of pharmacy practice, family, and personal growth while staying committed to life-long learning.
Purpose statement
The purpose of the Parkview Health PGY1 pharmacy residency program is to build on Doctor of Pharmacy (Pharm.D.) education and outcomes to contribute to the development of clinical pharmacists responsible for medication-related care of patients with a wide range of conditions, eligible for board certification, and eligible for postgraduate year two (PGY2) pharmacy residency training.
Residency site
Parkview Regional Medical Center
Located on an expanded north Fort Wayne campus, Parkview Regional Medical Center (PRMC) provides medical services to patients in Indiana, Ohio, and Michigan. PRMC provides over 550 private acute care rooms. The facility is a level II adult and pediatric trauma center, an accredited pain center and a certified primary stroke center. PRMC also features specialty centers for orthopedics, women's and children's health, cancer and cardiovascular care.
The Department of Pharmacy at PRMC provides state of the art comprehensive pharmaceutical care services. The pharmacy practice model includes both clinical pharmacy generalists and clinical pharmacy specialists. The Department of Pharmacy has a strong presence in the inpatient setting and have clinical pharmacists rounding on 20 multidisciplinary health care teams Monday through Friday and 13 multidisciplinary health care teams seven days a week. Multidisciplinary teams include Internal Medicine, Critical Care, Cardiology, Pediatrics, Trauma, Emergency Medicine, Oncology, and Infectious Diseases. Other clinical services include inpatient pharmacokinetic dosing, nutrition support, targeted drug therapy monitoring, antimicrobial stewardship, and more.
Benefits to program residents:
- The program correlates with the needs of the resident, based on previous experience, pharmacy practice interests and individual aspirations.
- The residency program is divided into individual learning experiences, with approximately the first six weeks devoted to orientation in the operational, clinical and longitudinal services.
- An individualized development plan is created for each resident and evaluated continually throughout the year.
- Each resident receives individual attention from the residency program coordinator, as well as supervision on all major residency projects. This individual helps guide the resident’s professional development throughout the year. This individual attention from the residency coordinator is highly valued within the program. The mentoring relationship is established early in the residency year and continues on a weekly basis for the duration of the program. The residency coordinator focuses weekly discussions on the resident’s rotation program, project management, residency goals and career planning.
- Multiple teaching opportunities exist within the program. Residents will participate in precepting of APPE pharmacy students. Residents have the option of participating in the Indiana Pharmacy Teaching Certificate Program. Nearby Manchester University College of Pharmacy offers the opportunity to participate in didactic and laboratory teaching environments.
Key Preceptors
Abby Todt, PharmD, BCPS
Pharmacy Director, Quality & Patient Care Services
Residency Program Director
Luke Keller, PharmD, BCPS, BCCCP
Medical Intensive Care
Jennifer Sposito, PharmD, BCPS
Cardiovascular Intensive Care
Kris Howard, PharmD, AACC
Cardiology
Blake Burton, PharmD, BCPS
Adult Internal Medicine & Surgery
Mike Todt, PharmD, BCCCP
Medical Intensive Care
Andrea Sloat, PharmD
Anticoagulation Therapy Unit
Aaron Daseler, PharmD, BCCCP
Surgical Trauma Intensive Care
Christina Ford, PharmD, BCPS
Adult Internal Medicine & Surgery
Cole Luty, PharmD, BCPS
Adult Internal Medicine & Surgery
Salary and benefits
- $48,900 stipend
- 15 non-consecutive vacation/sick days
- 12 educational professional leave days
- Medical, dental, vision, prescription drug, life and disability insurance available
- Office space with individual computer
- Monogrammed lab coat provided
- $1,250 stipend for ASHP Midyear Clinical Meeting
- All reasonable expenses reimbursed for the Great Lakes Pharmacy Resident Conference
Program structure and requirements
Parkview Health pharmacy residents are required to complete twelve months of practice experience during their residency. No more than one-third of the twelve-month PGY1 pharmacy residency program may deal with a specific patient disease state and population (e.g., critical care, oncology, cardiology). Residents must spend two thirds (or more) of the program in direct patient care activities. Additional rotation opportunities may be arranged at the residents’ request.
Required Rotations (4 weeks in length, unless otherwise specified)
- Adult Internal Medicine & Surgery (6 weeks in length)
- Cardiology
- Critical Care (6 weeks in length: 4 weeks in Medical Intensive Care Unit, 2 weeks in resident's choice of Cardiovascular or Surgical/Trauma Intensive Care Units)
- Focused Internal Medicine (1 week in length)
Required Longitudinal Rotations
- Anticoagulation Therapy Unit (one day every other week for six months)
- Practice Management
- Research
- Staffing
Elective Rotations (4 weeks in length)
- Academia
- Administration
- Advanced Internal Medicine
- Ambulatory Cardiology
- Clinical Informatics
- Drug Information
- Emergency Medicine
- Falls Prevention Clinic (1 day per week for 12 weeks)
- Infectious Disease
- Investigational Drug Services
- Medical Intensive Care Unit
- Medication Safety
- Neonatal Intensive Care Unit
- Neurology
- Inpatient Oncology
- Ambulatory Oncology
- Ambulatory Infectious Disease
- Ambulatory Gastroenterology
- Pain & Palliative Care
- Population Health
- Primary Care Clinics
- Pediatrics & Pediatric Intensive Care Unit
Required Activities
- Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support training and certification
- Process improvement project with poster presentation at ASHP Midyear Clinical Meeting
- Major research project with results presented at Great Lakes Pharmacy Resident Conference and a written manuscript
- Weekend staffing (every third weekend)
- Holiday staffing (1 major, 1 minor)
Requirements for Attendance at Professional Meetings
- ASHP Midyear Clinical Meeting
- Great Lakes Pharmacy Resident Conference
- Various Parkview-sponsored Symposiums per resident interest
Application and information
Residency candidates must have a Doctor of Pharmacy degree and be eligible for pharmacist licensure in Indiana. Candidates must also register for the Matching Program and have a National Matching Services (NMS) applicant number.