A Day in the Life of a Cardiac Care Unit Pharmacist...
December 1, 2011 - Professional Advice / Opinions By: Dr. Manouchkathe Cassagnol – Dr. Manouchkathe Cassagnol is an Assistant Clinical Professor at St. John’s University College of Pharmacy and Allied Health Professions and a Clinical Coordinator of Internal Medicine and Cardiology Pharmacotherapy at Long Island Jewish Medical Center. About 81 million people in this country suffer from cardiovascular disease. Therefore, as pharmacy practitioners,… |
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Alumni Spotlight: Reducing Medication Dispensing Errors...
December 1, 2011 - Featured , Professional Advice / Opinions By: Joseph Saffi, RPh – Joseph Saffi is a St. John’s University College of Pharmacy graduate, class of 1985. He is currently the supervising pharmacist at Pathmark Pharmacy of Franklin Square in Long Island, New York, and has been working for Pathmark pharmacies since 1988. Mr. Saffi is also a community pharmacy preceptor with St.… |
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Differences Between Antagonists and Inverse Agonists...
December 1, 2011 - Clinical By: Neal Shah – There are two major classifications of drug-receptor activity: agonism and antagonism. Agonism occurs when a molecule binds to a receptor, causes an exertion of normal receptor operation, and eventually causes a response. Antagonism of a receptor occurs when a molecule binds to the receptor and does not allow activity to occur.1… |
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Drug Shortages: Impacts and Prevention Measures...
December 1, 2011 - Featured , In the News / Politics , Professional Advice / Opinions By: Jimmy Johnson, PharmD Candidate c/o 2012 – Drug shortages have become more and more of an issue in the health care industry. There are over 200 drugs on the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) drug shortage list – a number that has tripled in the last five years.1 The largest impact has been on anesthesia… |
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Event Spotlight: “Who Wants to be a PharmD?”...
December 1, 2011 - Events By: Marie Huang – As the studio lights dimmed and the dynamic music played in the background, many students gathered in St. Albert Hall B75 in anticipation of who will be crowned the game’s next “PharmD.” A competitive air dangled, but the crowd chattered excitedly as a generous lunch was provided. Four seats lined the… |
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Faculty Spotlight: Dr. Charles R. Ashby...
December 1, 2011 - Featured , Professional Advice / Opinions By: Neal Shah – Dr. Ashby is a well-known Pharmacology professor for student pharmacists studying in their professional years. He graduated from the University of Louisville with a BA in Biology and Psychology in 1983. After obtaining his PhD in Pharmacology from the University of Louisville in 1987, he continued his education by obtaining a… |
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Federal Government to Attempt Limiting Drug Shortages...
December 1, 2011 - In the News / Politics By: Mahdieh Danesh Yazdi, with special thanks to Dr. Tomasz Jodlowski – Drug shortages have plagued health care institutions in recent years; they present a serious problem to health care delivery on a national scale. In 2004, there were 58 drug shortages; now, in 2011, this number has increased to 198. Due to limited access… |
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Finding Your Niche in Pharmacy...
December 1, 2011 - Professional Advice / Opinions By: Nandini Puranprashad – As primary advocators of patient care, student pharmacists and pharmacists are well on their way in changing the public’s impression of us staying behind the counter at the corner drugstore doing nothing but “counting, licking, and sticking.” It is time to step out of the classroom and from behind the counters… |
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Happy Holidays and Best Wishes for 2012!...
December 1, 2011 - Professional Advice / Opinions By: Ebey P. Soman – Dear Sir or Madam, Christmas is just a few days away, and an amazing year of great challenges, pleasant surprises, and endeavors is coming to a close. From working on Drugs & Diseases courses to simply having the privilege of being part of the profession at the White Coat Ceremony,… |
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HIV Transmitted from a Living Organ Donor: NYC, 2009...
December 1, 2011 - Clinical By: Alisha Kumar, PharmD Candidate c/o 2012 – HIV transmission via organ transplantation is rare in the United States. However, after a public health investigation in 2010, a case of HIV transmission via kidney transplantation was confirmed. The kidney recipient had no history of sexually transmitted infections (STIs), injection drug use, sex with injection drug… |
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Interview with Dr. Elizabeth Palillo...
December 1, 2011 - Featured , Professional Advice / Opinions By: Mahdieh Danesh Yazdi – Dr. Elizabeth Palillo graduated from the University of Connecticut in 2006. She then worked as a manager at CVS for a year and a half, and eventually moved to New York, where she worked at two other CVS stores. Dr. Palillo then left CVS and joined Bronx-Lebanon Hospital as a… |
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Ivabradine: A Novel I(f) Blocker for Stable Angina...
December 1, 2011 - Clinical By: Neal Shah – Part I: Preface. Part II: Brief review of cardiac electrophysiology. Part III: Ivabradine as a novel If blocker for the use of stable angina. Part IV: On the horizon: trimetazidine. – PREFACE When viewed anatomically, the heart may seem like a simple organ. However, the electrophysiological aspects of the heart are… |
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Providing the Helping Hand...
December 1, 2011 - Professional Advice / Opinions By: Maria Sorbera, AMSCOP at LIU, PharmD Candidate c/o 2013 – Maria Sorbera is the President of the Rho Chi Beta Theta Chapter at the Arnold & Marie Schwartz College of Pharmacy at Long Island University (LIU). She is a strong advocate of networking with fellow pharmacists, as well as the need for more unity… |
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Puzzle: Word Search...
December 1, 2011 - Puzzles By: Marie Huang – A E N N E T D B I E O C T U M E N D D N A E L D R O I E I N E I I C I O T N N I E B I I A T M C Z D D… |
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Stool Transplants in C. difficile Infections...
December 1, 2011 - Clinical , Featured By Ebey P. Soman – Many living organisms occupy our intestines to aid us with metabolism, recycling of hormones, and, most importantly, protection against foreign pathogens. When this normal flora of bacteria is altered or eliminated via antibiotic use, there is an opportunity for Clostridium difficile to infect us. Stool transplant, or fecal bacteriotherapy, is… |
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Student Pharmacist Star of the Month: Jena Marion...
December 1, 2011 - Professional Advice / Opinions By: Marie Huang – Each month, Rho Chi Post editors have the wonderful opportunity to sit down with an inspiring leader among the student pharmacists here at St. John’s University – someone who is not afraid to stand apart from the crowd and can be the change he or she wants to see in the… |