Five postgraduate pharmacy practice residents at Samford University’s McWhorter School of Pharmacy completed residency programs in June. They received certificates of completion in a special ceremony on June 29.
All had previously earned Doctor of Pharmacy degrees from Samford or another accredited pharmacy school before entering Samford’s 12-month post graduate year one (PGY1) residency training program.
The pharmacy professionals and the placement sites where they completed their residencies are:
Julie Bosler, McWhorter Drug Information Center
Kim Hood, Christ Health Center, Birmingham
Megan Goolsby Monroe, Jefferson County Department of Health, Birmingham
Pilar Murphy, Perry County Health Department, Marion, Ala.
Jessica Whalen Skelley, Jefferson County Department of Health
Postgraduate Year One (PGY1) pharmacy residency programs build upon knowledge, skills, attitudes and abilities gained from an accredited professional pharmacy degree program. The intent is to enhance general competencies in managing medication-use systems, and support optimal medication therapy outcomes for patients with a broad range of disease states.
Nationwide, about 18 percent of Pharm.D. graduates pursue postgraduate training, says McWhorter pharmacy practice chair Dr. Michael D. Hogue. In addition to the general practice PGY1 program, a PGY2 program offers further training in specialized areas.
McWhorter School of Pharmacy has offered accredited PGY1 residency training for pharmacists since 1992. It supports post-residency programs at seven accredited practice sites.