Additional activities enable pharmacists to evaluate existing patient care services, develop strategies for continuous quality improvement, and create an implementation plan for their practice. Cynthia J. Boyle, Gary R. Matzke, and Robert S. Leadership and advocacy are more art than science. In pharmacy, leadership is an important professional attribute and skill that must be developed and applied over a lifetime of practice and volunteer service.
Through the personal stories, real life dilemmas, and experienced perspectives in this book revision, readers will learn that applying leadership to advocacy is about relationships, communication, and desire. Knowledge of statistical principles is necessary if one wants to make meaning of pharmaceutical and clinical research data.
Without the skills and confidence needed to read the literature, pharmacists cannot stay abreast of the most recent findings concerning experimental therapies or emerging safety concerns regarding specific medications. Making Meaning of Data in Pharmaceutical and Clinical Research provides readers with the tools to better understand the methods and results of published papers so that they can judge for themselves whether the conclusions reached by the authors are supported by the data presented.
Berger and William A. Villaume ISBN: ; pp. Both chapters result from what the authors have learned from their interactions over the past six years with their students and health care professionals. David F. Kisor, David R. Bright, Thomas R. This new title provides a basic and clinical foundation for the application of drug-gene interactions in clinical therapeutics. Robert A. Buerki and Louis D. Vottero ISBN: ; pp. Pharmacy Ethics: A Foundation for Professional Practice is an introductory text on the professional ethics of pharmacy practice.
The text is designed for use in pharmacy practice courses in which professional ethics is only one component of the instruction. Written in a conversational style, the text includes over 40 case studies and situations that encourage class discussion and questions for reflection that encourage individual thought.
Preceptors in experiential rotations can use this resource to help students reflect on how ethical issues can affect their practice of pharmacy. Just as some authors keep on writing the same book, Dutch architect Peer Bedaux seems to keep on designing the same building.
His distinctive plans and production consist largely of houses, small offices, schools and modest government buildings, and their mystery lies in their sameness, the determination with which Bedaux has investigated, tested and perfected a few themes in all their variations.
By consistently--sometimes even stoically--holding to particular shapes and ideas, he conveys the power of sophisticated variations on a worthy theme.
After participation in a pre-pharmacy program his senior year of high school, Gourley became hooked. For more than 40 years, he dedicated his life to helping others expand the profession. Gourley received his pre-pharmacy at UT Knoxville, where he played varsity baseball. His first professional job was at Mercer University Southern College of Pharmacy, where he was an assistant professor of clinical pharmacy.
As dean of the pharmacy college, Dr. The new building might be one of his largest undertakings yet, but Dr. Gourley is no stranger to mammoth-sized projects. The former chairman of the Board of Pharmaceutical Specialties also played a pivotal role in the expansion of the college with the opening of a second campus in Knoxville and establishment of Clinical Education Centers in Chattanooga, Kingsport, and Nashville.
News and World Report magazine.
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