department of pharmacy and clinical sciences annual report july 1, 2006 – june 30...

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Department of Pharmacy and Clinical Sciences Annual Report July 1, 2006 – June 30, 2007 SUMMARY The academic year was marked by activities and accomplishments reflective of the department’s commitment to teaching and scholarship. Increases in scholarly productivity and teaching efforts are notable. Faculty members continued to participate in both the peer evaluation of teaching program and in the design and delivery of new courses in the South Carolina College of Pharmacy curriculum. Two faculty members, Drs. Jolie Fermo and Holly McFall, left the department to take a other positions and four new faculty members (see below) were recruited. During the coming year, the department will work towards integration with our sister department in Columbia. A number of faculty members received prestigious awards. Drs. Wayne Weart, Philip Hall, and Kelly Ragucci, received awards as outstanding teachers from the College’s students, while Dr. Sandra Garner was received the MUSC Foundations Teaching Excellence Award in the Educator-Mentor category, and Dr. Jean Nappi received the Education Award from the American College of Clinical Pharmacyi n recognition of her sustained and outstanding contributions to clinical pharmacy education The Department’s major accomplishments were: Accomplishments for 2006-2007 1. The faculty-developed system/method for peer evaluation of teaching was further refined and used for a second year, involving most members of the department. 2. The Academic Preparation Track/Certificate Program (formerly the Academic Residency Track) developed and implemented by the Department faculty was delivered successfully again this year. This year’s group of successful residents included, for the first time, two VA residents. 3. The Chair has continued to refine the now web-based resource for new faculty orientation and general faculty development. 4. Successfully organized and deliver a half-day retreat for the faculty from both campuses. Chair also conducted meetings in Columbia with department as a whole and with individual faculty. 5. Department faculty worked with counterparts in Columbia to further develop and deliver departmental SCCP courses. 6. Faculty of department have increased their commitment to scholarly activity as reflected by increases in numbers of presentations, publications, grant submissions, and research support. 7. Successfully recruited four new faculty members (P. Schuler – Cardiology, C. Paik – Community Pharmacy, A. Thompson – Ambulatory Care, J. Sterrett – Pharmacy Practice Laboratory). 8. Assisted in recruitment of new faculty for USC Campus. 9. Dr. Anne Spencer (Vice chair for Professional Development) successfully developed several related initiates which have been and continue to be rolled out. She continues to develop further initiatives. 10. Successfully delivered all courses for which the department is responsible despite the loss of clinical faculty. 11. Performance of all regular faculty was assessed and goals for the next academic year identified 12. Chair has continued to assess goals, needs, and barriers to success for all faculty members and has proposed changes in faculty job descriptions which would allow a greater degree of academic success for the faculty. 13. Three of the College’s five teaching awards were presented to Department faculty members. 14. Successfully negotiated a partnership agreement with Kerr Drug for the support of practitioner faculty.

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Department of Pharmacy and Clinical Sciences Annual Report July 1, 2006 – June 30, 2007

SUMMARY

The academic year was marked by activities and accomplishments reflective of the department’s commitment to teaching and scholarship. Increases in scholarly productivity and teaching efforts are notable. Faculty members continued to participate in both the peer evaluation of teaching program and in the design and delivery of new courses in the South Carolina College of Pharmacy curriculum. Two faculty members, Drs. Jolie Fermo and Holly McFall, left the department to take a other positions and four new faculty members (see below) were recruited. During the coming year, the department will work towards integration with our sister department in Columbia. A number of faculty members received prestigious awards. Drs. Wayne Weart, Philip Hall, and Kelly Ragucci, received awards as outstanding teachers from the College’s students, while Dr. Sandra Garner was received the MUSC Foundations Teaching Excellence Award in the Educator-Mentor category, and Dr. Jean Nappi received the Education Award from the American College of Clinical Pharmacyi n recognition of her sustained and outstanding contributions to clinical pharmacy education The Department’s major accomplishments were: Accomplishments for 2006-2007 1. The faculty-developed system/method for peer evaluation of teaching was further refined

and used for a second year, involving most members of the department. 2. The Academic Preparation Track/Certificate Program (formerly the Academic Residency

Track) developed and implemented by the Department faculty was delivered successfully again this year. This year’s group of successful residents included, for the first time, two VA residents.

3. The Chair has continued to refine the now web-based resource for new faculty orientation and general faculty development.

4. Successfully organized and deliver a half-day retreat for the faculty from both campuses. Chair also conducted meetings in Columbia with department as a whole and with individual faculty.

5. Department faculty worked with counterparts in Columbia to further develop and deliver departmental SCCP courses.

6. Faculty of department have increased their commitment to scholarly activity as reflected by increases in numbers of presentations, publications, grant submissions, and research support.

7. Successfully recruited four new faculty members (P. Schuler – Cardiology, C. Paik – Community Pharmacy, A. Thompson – Ambulatory Care, J. Sterrett – Pharmacy Practice Laboratory).

8. Assisted in recruitment of new faculty for USC Campus. 9. Dr. Anne Spencer (Vice chair for Professional Development) successfully developed

several related initiates which have been and continue to be rolled out. She continues to develop further initiatives.

10. Successfully delivered all courses for which the department is responsible despite the loss of clinical faculty.

11. Performance of all regular faculty was assessed and goals for the next academic year identified

12. Chair has continued to assess goals, needs, and barriers to success for all faculty members and has proposed changes in faculty job descriptions which would allow a greater degree of academic success for the faculty.

13. Three of the College’s five teaching awards were presented to Department faculty members.

14. Successfully negotiated a partnership agreement with Kerr Drug for the support of practitioner faculty.

The general achievements of the Department in the areas of teaching and scholarship include the fact that departmental faculty provided 19 regular and 7 elective courses in the professional pharmacy curriculum. More specifically, over 1000 classroom and laboratory hours of instruction were provided related to didactic material. Many faculty members also participated in courses outside the College of Pharmacy. In conjunction with volunteer faculty, experiential experiences were provided for all students. Our practice-based faculty provided many months of service/patient care at the Medical University Hospital and provided many hours of inservice education to Medical Center staff. The faculty produced 30 publications in the peer-reviewed literature in addition to 5 book chapters and monographs. In addition, the faculty efforts accounted for 27 and 101 contributed and invited presentations, respectively. Finally, department faculty served as principal or co-investigators on numerous grants and contracts during the academic year totaling over five million dollars.

SPECIFIC ACTIVITIES/ACCOMPLISHMENTS

1. Teaching A. Doctor of Pharmacy Program

John Bosso 1. Clinical Pharmacokinetics (PHMPR-640)* 37 Classroom/Contact Hours 2. Advanced Drug Information (PHMPR-729)* 7 Classroom/Contact Hours 3. Advanced Therapeutics I (PHMPR-732) 23 Classroom/Contact Hours 4. Advanced Therapeutics III (PHMRP-734) 4 Classroom/Contact Hours 5. Clinical Track Conference II (PHMPR-781) 1 Classroom/Contact Hours 6. Residents’ Academic Series 4 Classroom/Contact Hours 7. Pathophysiology 338 (College of Health 2 Classroom/Contact Hours

Professions) 8. Infectious Diseases Fellowship Didactic 4 Classroom/Contact Hours

Lecture Series (College of Medicine)

*Course coordinator Elinor Chumney 1. Designs for Outcomes Research (PHMPR-709, 30 contact hours). Course coordinator. Fall 2006. 2. Statistics for Outcomes Research (PHMPR-751, 15 contact hours). Course coordinator. Spring

2007. 3. Drug Information (PHMPR-7XX, 2 contact hours). Lecturer. Spring 2007. 4. Peer Evaluation of Teaching Program. Evaluator and evaluated

Shannon Drayton 1. DPT VII, PHMPR #727, Psychiatry: 21 hours 2. Patient Assessment, PHMPR #662: 2 hours lecture, 9 hours lab 3. Grand Rounds, 7 Precepted, 5 Evaluated 4. Pharmacy 640, Drug Interactions, Psychiatry: 2 hours

Peter Edwards 1. Professional Experience Unit-II (PEU-2) PHMPR 661 01 (P-2 Class)

Course Coordinator (2 50-minute introductions to course) 2. Maymester/Augustmester Experiential Externships (P-3 Class)

(1 50-minute introduction to course) Community Externship PHMPR 700 01 Course Coordinator Hospital Externship PHMPR 701 01 Course Coordinator

3. Advanced Practice Clinical Clerkships PHMPR 810-891 (P-4 Class) Course Coordinator (1 50-minute introduction; schedule 705 rotations, compile grades, keep attendance records, preceptor evaluations, and time sheets)

4. Pharmacy Law and Ethics PHMPR 711 01 (P-3 Class) Course Coordinator- plus Banks Smith,R Ph, DHEC Regional Director and Jon Wallace, PharmD, JD, et al (23-50 minute classes and coordinate and compile grades) SCCP Introductory Pharmacy Practice Experience (IPPE) PHMPR 699 (P-1 Class) Schedule and Coordinate MUSC Campus IPPE Community Rotations

Sandra Garner 1. Track Conference I, PHMPR 780, 8, Co-coordinator 2. Track Conference II, PHMPR 781, 1, Co-coordinator 3. Track Conference III, PHMPR 782, 1, Co-coordinator 4. Disease Processes and Therapeutics I, PHMPR 732, 7 5. Disease Processes and Therapeutics III, PHMPR 734, 6 6. Clinical Pharmacokinetics, PHMPR 680, 3 7. Advanced Drug Information, PHMPR 729, 2 Journal Club evaluations 8. Clinical Applications I, PHMPR 600, 2 lecture hours and Co-coordinator 9. Clinical Applications II, PHMPR 601, Co-coordinator 10. Grand Rounds, 1 precepted, 1 evaluated Philip Hall 1. Therapeutics I (PHMPR-732) – 4 hours 2. Microbiology/Immunology (SCCP 610) – 22 hours 3. Clinical Pharmacokinetics (PHRSC-680) – 1 hour 4. Nutrition/Hematology (PHMPR-681) – 8 hours

Resident Seminars # precepted – 1 # evaluated – 2 Grand Rounds # precepted – 2 # evaluated - 9

Donna Harrison 1. SCCP 670 Community Laboratory I (9 hrs/wk lab--semester) - Course Coordinator 2. PHMPR 751 Special Projects (4 students x 1 semester) 3. SCCP 671 Compounding Laboratory (9 hrs/wk lab--semester) - Course Coordinator 4. PHMPR 729 Advanced Drug Information - 3 hours

“Systematic approach to Drug Information Questions” January 12 and January 17, 2007

5. PHMPR 711 Ethics Class Substituted for 2 classes (2 hours) - October 20 and December 1, 2006 Clerkships PHMPR 849-07 Academic Clerkship Community - (1 student- November) PHMPR 849-08 Academic Clerkship Compounding - (1 student-March) Resident Seminars: 1 evaluated Grand Rounds:

8 evaluated Arnold Karig 1. Ambulatory and Self Care Therapeutics

PHMPR 676 30 hours

2. Patient Assessment and Care PHMPR 679 Lecture 6 hours Laboratory (3 sections x 3 hrs/section x 4 weeks) 36 hour OSCE’s 7 students 3. History of Pharmacy PHMPR 760 6 hours Marc Lapointe 1. Track Conference I (PHMPR 780), 2 contact hr (supervised a resident) 2. Clinical Pharmacokinetics (PHMPR-680), 2 contact hrs 3. DPT II (PHMPR-733), 2 contact hrs 4. DPT III (PHMPR-734), 13 contact hrs

Kristi Lenz Doctor of Pharmacy Program Total = 57 contact hrs Fall 2006 1. PHMPR 758: Survey of Herbal Medicine, 17 contact hrs (Note: Course Coordinator) 2. PHMPR 760: Disease Process & Therapeutics II, 12 contact hrs Spring 2007 1. PHMPR 676: Self Care Therapeutics 2 contact hrs 2. PHMPR 677: Patient Assessment + Lab 15 contact hrs

(+ 6 student OSCEs at 1 hour each) 3. PHMPR 680: Clinical Pharmacokinetics 1 contact hr 4. PHMPR 729: Advanced Drug Information 3 contact hrs 5. PHMPR 759: Acute Care Therapeutics 2 contact hrs 6. PHMPR 760: Disease Process & Therapeutics III 5 contact hrs Patrick Mauldin 1. 709 Designs for Outcomes Research, 2 hours/week, Co-taught with Dr. Elinor Chumney. Jean Nappi 1. PHMPR 705 Therapeutics 16 2. PHMPR 680 Clinical Pharmacokinetics 2 3. PHMPR 729 Advanced Drug Information 1 Ronald Nickel 1. Pharmacy Practice Management –PHMPR 663

Course Coordinator

Contact (teaching) hours- 30 81 students

2. History of Pharmacy- PHMPR-760-01 Course director Contact (teaching) hours- 30(14 hours of lecture) 28 students

3. Patient Assessment- PHMPR 731 Contact (teaching )hours in “communication module”- 9 hours 81 students

4. Ambulatory and Self-Care Therapy- PHMPR 676 Course Director Contact hours- 26 ( includes 2 lecture hours) 80 students

5. Introduction to Pharmacy –SCCP 650 MUSC campus coordinator (DE) Contact hours – 10 hours ( 6 lecture hours) MUSC- 81 students (USC 110 students

6. Topics in the History of the Health Sciences- INTDS 613 Contact (teaching) hours-1 Students- 20

Kelly Ragicci 1. Track Conference I (PHMPR 780), 8 contact hours, course co-coordinator 2. Track Conference II (PHMPR 781), 15 contact hours, course co-coordinator 3. Track Conference III (PHMPR 782), 15 contact hours, course co-coordinator 4. Pharmacotherapeutics – Women’s Health (PHMPR 732), 11 contact hours, module coordinator 5. Pharmacotherapeutics – Gastrointestinal Diseases (PHMPR 733), 3 contact hours, module

coordinator 6. Pharmacotherapeutics – Endocrinology (PHMPR 733), 3 contact hours 7. Pharmacotherapeutics – Geriatrics (PHMPR 734), 2 contact hours 8. Patient Assessment and Care (PHMPR 679), 6 contact hours 9. Advanced Drug Information (PHMPR 729), 2 contact hours, journal club section co-coordinator 10. Grand Rounds (PHMPR 838), 4 students precepted, 10 students evaluated

Sarah Shrader 1. PHMPR 676 Ambulatory and Self Care: Footcare-1hr 2. PHMPR 733 DPT II: Osteoarthritis-2hr 3. PHMPR 732 DPT I: Smoking Cessation-2hr 4. PHMPR 732 DPT I: COPD-1hr 5. PHMPR 732 DPT I: PCOS-2hr 6. PHMPR 679 Patient Assessment and Care: Course Coordinator 7. PHMPR 679 Patient Assessment and Care: Immunizations-2hr lecture; 6hr lab 8. PHMPR 679 Patient Assessment and Care: Diabetes Part I-2hr lecture; 9hr lab 9. PHMPR 679 Patient Assessment and Care: Diabetes Part II-2hr lecture; 6hr lab 10. PHMPR 679 Patient Assessment and Care: Lifestyle Modifications-2hr lecture; 9hr lab 11. PHMPR 729 Advanced Drug Information: Journal Club-1hr Anne Spencer 1. Disease Process and Therapeutics, 18.0 hours 2. Acute Care Therapeutics, 28.0 hours, course coordinator 3. Survey of Herbal Medicine and Healing Practices, 3.0 hours 4. Advanced Drug Information, 1.5 hours

5. Patient Assessment and Care, 2.0 hours (+ 6 lab hours & 5 OSCEs) 6. Clinical Applications, 2.0 hours Wayne Weart 1. Teaching (Fall Semester 2006):

Disease Processes and Therapeutics I (PHMPR-732) – Course Coordinator 11 credits Hypertension – 5 class hours

Dyslipidemia – 5 class hours Complex cases – 4 class hours Proctored Web-CT exams (8 out of 8 exams) Exam review (CV) – 1 hour

2. Pharmacy Grand Rounds (PHMPR-838) – Course Coordinator 0.5 credits Precepted 15 students and evaluated 18 students

3. History of Pharmacy (Elective) 6 hours of lecture, 2 tours and small group discussion 4. Ambulatory Care Clerkship Bar and Grill sessions (student case presentations) 3-8 sessions per month of 2-3 hours each

includes all students and residents taking one of the following ambulatory care rotations (Family Medicine, UDC, McBanks, Pharmacotherapy Clinic and Outpatient Transplant)- 17 students and 5 residents during fall semester

(Spring Semester 2007) 1. Disease Processes and Therapeutics II (PHMPR 733) – Course Coordinator 6 credits

Sleep disorders – 2 class hours GERD and peptic ulcer disease – 3 class hours Gout – 2 class hours NSAIDs – 1 class hour (Rheumatology section coordinator) Metabolic Syndrome – 3 class hours Type 2 Diabetes – 5 class hours (Endocrinology section coordinator)

Cumulative patient cases – 3 class hours Complex cases – 2 class hours Proctored Web-CT exams (4 exams) Exam reviews – 3 class hour

2. Disease Processes and Therapeutics III (PHMPR734) – Course Coordinator 5 credits Drug Interactions – 9 class hours (Section coordinator) Proctored Web-CT exams (1 out of 3 exams) Exam review (1 exam)

3. Pharmacy Grand Rounds (PHMPR 839) – Course Coordinator 0.5 Credits Precepted 7 students and evaluated 12 students

4. Ambulatory Care Clerkship Bar and Grill sessions (student case presentations) 3-8 sessions per month of 2-3 hours each includes all students and residents taking one of the following ambulatory care rotations (Family Medicine, UDC, McBanks, Pharmacotherapy Clinic, and Outpatient Transplant) – 8 students and 2 residents during spring semester

5. Resident seminars 1 precepted and 3 evaluated 6. Mentor for Dr. Doug Jennings Academic Preperation Program

Mentor for Jennifer Christ (VA Resident) 2 lectures in DPT

Marlea Wellein PHMPR-733-4: Disease Processes and Therapeutics II-III 1. Co-coordinated geriatrics module (20 hrs)

a. Taught 10 hrs b. Administered final exam (2 hrs)

2. GI Bleed (GI module): 1 hr 3. Complex Case discussion: 2 hr

PHMPR-759: Acute Care Therapeutics (4 hrs)

PHMPR-765: Geriatrics and Long Term Care Pharmacy (3 hr course) 1. Co-coordinated course (with Andrea Wessell)

Taught 12 hrs

PHMPR 729: Advanced Drug Information 1. Systematic Approach to DI Requests 2 hrs SCCP 661: Clinical Applications II 1. Acute or Chronic Renal Failure 2 hrs PHMPR 781: Track Conference II 1. Curriculum Vitae 1 hr

Andrea Wessell

1. Ambulatory and Self-Care Therapeutics, 2 contact hrs 2. Advanced Drug Information, 2 contact hrs 3. Geriatrics and Long-Term Care Pharmacy Practice Elective, Course co-coordinator (3 credit hrs), 12

contact hrs 4. DPT I – Complex cases, 2 contact hrs 5. DPT III – Geriatrics, 10 contact hrs 6. Clinical Applications I – Course co-coordinator, 8 contact hrs 7. Clinical Applications II – Course co-coordinator, 12 contact hrs

Don Wiest 1. Therapeutics II (PHMPR 733)- Toxicology Section

# classroom hours: 12 Section Coordinator: Yes

2. Therapeutics III (PHMPR 734)- Pediatric Section # classroom hours: 2 Section Coordinator: Yes

3. Clinical Applications I (SCCP 600) # classroom hours: 22 Course Director: Yes

4. Clinical Applications II (SCCP 661) # classroom hours: 24 Course Director: Yes

5. Drug Information # classroom hours: 1

6. Clerkships General Pediatrics: 8 students, 4 Residents Pediatric Intensive Care: 4 Students, 4 Residents

7. Resident Seminars 2 precepted, 4 evaluated Grand rounds, 1 precepted, 1 evaluated

8. Peer Teaching Evaluation

Evaluated Dr. Chumney

B. Doctor of Philosophy Programs

Elinor Chumney 1. Department of Biometry: Served on Doctoral Dissertation Committee for Shayna Lunsford, PhD 2. Department of Biometry: Served on Doctoral Dissertation Committee for Russell Goodman, MA 3. Department of Health Administration and Policy: Served on Doctoral Dissertation for Maghram

Alamri, PhD 4. Department of Health Administration and Policy. Decision Analysis and Models (HAP-730, 30

contact hours). Course coordinator. Fall 2006. 5. Department of Health Administration and Policy. Decision Analysis and Models (HAP-730, 30

contact hours). Course coordinator. Spring 2007. 6. Department of Health Administration and Policy. Decision Analysis and Models (HAP-730, 3

contact hours). Lecturer. Summer 2007.

C. Clinical Teaching John Bosso 1. Adult Infectious Diseases Pharm.D. students: 4; Residents: 2 Shannon Drayton 1. Psychiatry Clinical Clerkship, PHMPR #840 – 11 students, 5 residents Sandra Garner 1. Clinical Teaching 2. Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, 7 students 3. Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, 6 pediatric pharmacy residents and 1 pharmacy practice resident 4. Resident Seminars, 1 evaluated Philip Hall 1. Oncology Clerkship (PHRSC - 860) - 4 months 6 - Pharm.D. Students 3 - residents Marc Lapointe 1. Student Clerkship (precepted 10) – NSGY / Clinical Research

10 student-months offered in 2006-7 2. Resident Clerkship (precepted 2 residents)

6 resident-months offered in 2006-7 3. Resident Seminars, advised (1), evaluated (0)

Student Grand Rounds, advised (4), evaluated (4) Kristi Lenz Clinical Teaching Total = 25 student/resident months 1. PHMPR 860: Oncology Clerkship 15 student months 2. Pharmacy Practice Residents 4 resident months 3. Pharmacotherapy Residents 1 resident month 4. Oncology Residents Jean Nappi

1. Cardiology2 students, 2 residents

Kelly Ragucci 1. Family Medicine Outpatient Rotation - Core Ambulatory Care, 6 students, 3 residents (taking into

account maternity leave) 2. Family Medicine Inpatient Rotation – Acute Care, 3 students, 3 residents (taking into account

maternity leave) Shara Shrader 1. Family Medicine Ambulatory Care Rotation: 7 students; 3 residents 2. Family Medicine Inpatient Rotation: 2 students; 2 residents 3. Facilitator, Women’s Health Discussion Group (Every other month) 4. Facilitator, Internal Medicine Discussion Group (2 this year) Anne Spencer 1. Clinical Teaching (16.5 clinical rotations provided) 2. Internal Medicine, 5.5 students, 3 residents 3. Cardiology, 3 students, 4 residents 4. Academic Elective, 1 student Marlea Wellein 1. Internal Medicine (off service: July, October, ½ mo Jan, ½ mo Feb, ½ mo April, ½ mo May)

8.5 student equivalents 6 students that I precepted for an entire month 5 students that I precepted for ½ mo

2. 6.5 PGY1 resident equivalents 5 residents that I precepted for an entire month 3 residents that I precepted for ½ mo

3. 2.5 PGY2 resident equivalents 2 resident that I precepted for an entire month 1 resident that I precepted for ½ mo

4. Resident seminars/RITE Evaluated 2 resident seminars Evaluated 3 resident RITEs I was asked to provide feedback for 2 residents seminars and 1 resident RITE without being their preceptor or evaluator

5. Grand Rounds Precepted 3 grand rounds Evaluated 10 grand rounds

Andrea Wessell 1. Ambulatory Care/Family Medicine Clerkship, 6 student, 6 residents 2. Acute Care/Family Medicine Clerkship, 3 students, 4 residents 3. Grand Rounds, 7 precepted, 4 evaluated 4. Resident Seminars, 2 precepted, 2 evaluated 5. Resident Interactive Teaching Experience, 2 precepted, 2 evaluated

D. Other

Elinor Chumney

1. Director of the Dual PharmD/MBA Degree Program (advised approximately 75 current and prospective students regarding the dual degree program)

2. Advisor to Class of 2007 3. Faculty Advisor to 12 other Doctor of Pharmacy students 4. Grand Rounds: Worked with fifteen students on their presentations Sandra Garner 1. College of Pharmacy: Resident Academic Preparation Program 2. Committee member for statewide program expansion 3. Coordinator, Seminar series 4. Mentor for residents, 2 5. Panel discussion in seminar series (Precepting Students and Course Development), 2 College of Medicine: Foundations in Medicine (Pediatric Cases), 10 6. College of Nursing: Pediatric Nurse Practitioner Program, 2 Marc Lapointe 1. Drug updates for neurology residents 2. Hypertensive crisis (1 contact hrs) 3. Acute stroke care (1 contact hrs) 4. Hyponatremia (1 contact hrs) Kristi Lenz 1. Physician Assistant Program - Spring 2007

PA621: Pharmacology for PA Students 2 contact hrs 2. Interdisciplinary Teaching - Spring 2007

INTDS 680: Interdisciplinary Pain Management 4 contact hrs 3. Faculty Advisor Student and Resident Seminars Precepted or Evaluated Student seminars evaluated: 16 (includes those precepted) Resident seminars evaluated: 7 Student seminars precepted: 7 Callie Lane, Erythropoietin vs Darbepoietin James Davis, Xinlay for Metastatic Prostate Cancer Leslie Robinson, Lenalidomide for Myelodysplastic Syndrome Samantha DeLoach, Chemoprevention of Breast Cancer Ron Dickerson, Nabilone for Chemo-Induced Nausea/Vomiting Kyle Adkins, Yondelis:Sarcoma Treatment from the Sea Joanna Simmons, Lapatinib for Metastatic Breast Cancer Resident seminars precepted: 2 Jeff Gilreath, Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors in the Treatment of CML Jeff Gilreath, Treatment of Hemophilas, RITE Student and Resident Projects Precepted Resident projects precepted: 3

Jeff Gilreath, Mycophenolate Levels in Stem Cell Transplant Patients Theresa Breithaupt, Erythropietin vs Darbepoietin for Chemotherapy- and Cancer-Induced Anemia (Retrospective MUE) Kathryn Noyes, Revision of Febrile Neutropenia Protocols with Prospective Follow-Up for Adherence

8. Student and Resident Advising Faculty advisor: 4 P-2 students 2 P-3 students

5 P-4 students Patrick Mauldin

Jonathon Cohen, MUSC, “Cost-effectiveness analysis for head and neck cancer patients in South Carolina.” Primary Committee Member, 2006 – current. Masters Science Clinical Research, Department of Biostatistics and Epidemiology, MUSC.

Jean Nappi 1. resident advising 1 resident advisee 2. Grand Rds 1 precepted/ 4 evaluated 3. RITE 1 precepted/ 1 evaluated 4. Resident Seminar 1 precepted/ 1 evaluated Kelly Ragucci 1. Family Medicine Medical Student Lectures, 1 contact hour every other month 2. Resident Seminar, 1 resident precepted, 3 residents evaluated 3. Resident Interactive Teaching Experience, 1 resident precepted, 3 residents evaluated 4. Participated in Peer Evaluation Process (on committee, as evaluator and being evaluated) Shara Shrader 1. College of Medicine Family Medicine/Rural Clerkship Lecture: Asthma; 3rd year medical students (3

hrs/year) 2. MUSC Pharmacy Residency Academician Preparation Program: Small Group Facilatator Evaluator;

7 residents 3. RITE preceptor: 1 resident 4. RITE evaluator: 2 residents 5. Grand Rounds preceptor: 1 student 6. Grand Rounds evaluator: 1 student 7. PHMPR 679 OSCE coordinator and evaluator; 3hrs 8. PHMPR 679 CMOP tour; 6hrs 9. MUSC College of Medicine Senior Mentor Program: 2nd year medical students; 2 hrs 10. MUSC Department of Pharmacy & Clinical Sciences Peer Evaluation: 1 lecture presented; evaluator

3 lectures Anne Spencer 1. Research Elective, 3.0 credit hours for a P2 student (D. Wells) 2. Grand Rounds, 3 precepted, 8 evaluated 3. Resident Seminars, 2 evaluated 4. Resident Lecture, 1 precepted 5. Resident Project, 3.5 precepted 6. Internal Medicine Journal Club-1.0 7. Academician Preparatory Program, 1.0 Marlea Wellein 1. Geriatric Senior Mentor Program: 2nd year medical students

Pharmacotherapy assignment: small group discussion 2 hrs 2. Residency

a. Residency Program Director: Internal Medicine 1 resident: coordinate schedule, quarterly evaluations

Attend residency committee meetings b. Academician Preparation Program

Coordinate the program Expanded state-wide (worked with Mary Hess on Columbia campus to create a document (containing goals/objectives and requirements) that went out to all residency programs in state

Coordinated communication between resident and mentor Coordinated seminar series for CHS and Columbia campus Advised 2 residents as part of this program

c. Working with a phamacotherapy resident on a research project with Anne Spencer Development of sickle cell database

d. Working with pharmacotherapy resident on manuscript Case report: Hydroxycut and rhabdomyolysis

3. Professional Development Participating in PCAF initiative (Promoting Communication Among Faculty). Began this semester. Faculty from all colleges at MUSC who are interested in teaching and scholarship of teaching get together to discuss ideas, techniques, and strategies.

Andrea Wessell 1. Family Medicine/Rural Clerkship, College of Medicine, 6 contact hrs (7/06-1/07) 2. Family Medicine/Rural Clerkship, College of Medicine, 9% FTE, Quality improvement facilitator

(beginning 1/07)

Don Wiest 1. Department of Pediatrics EBM Course- Pediatric Residents

Fridays 12-1pm Course Development

2. Clinical Applications-SCCP 600 Clinical Applications-SCCP 661

2. PUBLICATIONS

A. Peer Reviewed Journal Articles

Bosso JA, Mauldin PD, Steed LL. Consequences of Combining Cystic Fibrosis and non-Cystic Fibrosis derived Pseudomonas aeruginosa Antibiotic Susceptibility Results in Hospital Antibiograms. Ann Pharmacother 2006;40:1946-9. Chumney EG, Simpson KN, and Mauldin PD, et al. Charges for Hospital Admissions Attributable to Health Disparities for African American Patients in South Carolina During 1998-2002. Journal of the National Medical Association 2006. 98(5): 690-694. Whitley HP, Fermo JD, and Chumney ECG. A 5-year evaluation of “flags” placed in the electronic medical record alerting clinicians to patients warranting secondary prevention of coronary heart disease. Pharmacotherapy 2006. 26(5): 682-688. Chumney ECG and Robinson L. The effects of pharmacist interventions on patients with polypharmacy. Pharmacy Practice 2006. 4(3):103-109.

Chumney ECG, Dismuke L, and Marques RG. Medical Evidence Regarding the Controversy over Alcoholic Liver Disease Transplantation. The Journal of the South Carolina Medical Association 2006. 98(5):690-94. Whitley H, Fermo J, Ragucci K, and Chumney ECG. Assessment of patient knowledge of diabetic goals, self-reported medication adherence, and goal attainment. Pharmacy Practice 2006. 4(4):183-190. Simpson KN, Luo MP, Chumney ECG, King MS, and Brun S. Cost-effectiveness of lopinavir/ritonavir compared to atazanavir in antiretroviral-naïve patients: Modeling the combined effects of HIV and heart disease. Clinical Drug Investigation 2007. 27(1):67-74. Whitley H, Fermo J, Chumney ECG, and Brzezinski W. Effect of patient-specific factors on weekly warfarin dose. Therapeutics and Clinical Risk Management 2007 (accepted, publication pending). Garner SS, Wiest DB, Stevens CE, Habib DM. Effect of heliox on albuterol delivery by metered-dose inhaler in pediatric in-vitro models of mechanical ventilation. Pharmacotherapy. 2006; 26:1396-1402. Hall PD, Sinha D, Frankel AE. Fresh Frozen Plasma and Platelet Concentrates May Increase Anti-diphtheria toxin IgG Concentrations: Implications for Diphtheria Fusion Protein Therapy. Cancer Immunol Immunother 2006;55:928-32. Gilreath J, Hall PD, Kolesar J, Lenz KL. Mitoxantrone Pharmacokinetics in a Super-Morbidly Obese Patient with Acute Myleoid Leukemia. Pharmacotherapy 2007 (in press). McDonnell AM and Lenz KL. Palifermin: Role in the Prevention of Chemotherapy- and Radiation-Induced Mucositis. Ann Pharmacother 2007;41:86-94. McDonnell AM, Lenz KL, Hall PD, Frei-Lahr D, Hayslip J. Fixed dose rasburicase in adult patients with tumor lysis syndrome. Pharmacotherapy 2006;26:806-12. Schnelldorfer T, Mauldin PD, Lewin DN, DB Adams. “Distal Pancreatectomy for Chronic Pancreatitis: Risk Factors for Postoperative Pancreatic Fistula.” Forthcoming in Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery. Choy CK, Spencer AP, Nappi JM. Prevalence of anemia in clinic patients with heart failure and cost analysis of epoetin treatment. Pharmacotherapy 2007;27:707-714 Thompson AN, Osgood TS, Ragucci KR. Doctor of pharmacy student patient care interventions in the intensive care unit. American Journal of Health System Pharmacy Accepted – in press. Ragucci KR, Trangmar PR, Bigby JG, Detar TD. Camphor ingestion in a 10-year old male. Southern Medical Journal 2007;100:204-7. Bushardt RL, Turner JL, Ragucci KR, Askins DG. Non-estrogen treatments for osteoporosis: an evidence-based review. Journal of the American Academy of Physician Assistants 2006;19:25-33. Whitley HP, Fermo JD, Ragucci KR, Chumney EC. Assessment of patient knowledge of diabetic goals, self-reported medication adherence and goal attainment. Pharmacy Practice 2006;4:183-90. Shrader SP, Ragucci KR. Life after the WHI: evaluation of postmenopausal symptoms and use of alternative therapies after discontinuation of hormone therapy. Pharmacotherapy 2006;26:1403-09.

Lawrence DB, Ragucci KR, Long LB, Parris BS, Helfer LA. Relationship of oral antihyperglycemic (sulfonylurea or metformin) medication adherence and hemoglobin A1c goal attainment for HMO patients enrolled in a diabetes disease management program. Journal of Managed Care Pharmacy 2006;12:466-71. Choy CK, Spencer AP, Nappi JN. Prevalence of anemia in heart failure clinic patients and cost analysis of epoetin treatment. Pharmacotherapy 2007;27:707-14. Gulbis BE, Spencer AP. A review of the efficacy and safety of a loop diuretic continuous infusion following cardiac surgery. Ann Pharamcotherapy 2006;40:1797-1803. Weart, CW and Bauman, GR: The case for a value-based formulary: Striving for total lowest net cost. Managed Care Interface 2007;(April) pp 42-47. Wessell AM, Liszka HA, Nietert PJ, Jenkins RG, Nemeth LS, Ornstein SM. Achievable Benchmarks of Care™ for Primary Care Quality Indicators in a Practice-Based Research Network. Accepted for publication, American Journal of Medical Quality, May 2007. Nemeth LS, Wessell AM, Jenkins RG, Nietert PJ, Liszka HA, Ornstein SM. Strategies to Accelerate Translation of Research into Primary Care within Practices Using Electronic Medical Records. Accepted for publication, Journal of Nursing Care Quality, April 2007. Feifer C, Nemeth LS, Nietert PJ, Wessell AM, Jenkins RG, Roylance L, Ornstein SM. Different Paths to High Quality Care: Three Archetypes of Top Performing Practice Sites. Accepted for publication, Annals of Family Medicine, November 2006. Nietert PJ, Wessell A, Jenkins RG, Feifer C, Nemeth LS, Ornstein SM. Using a summary measure for multiple quality indicators in primary care: the Summary Quality Index (SQUID). Implementation Science 2007, 2:11. DOI:10.1186/1748-5908-2-11. http://www.implementationscience.com/content/2/1/11 Ornstein S, Nietert PJ, Jenkins RG, Wessell AM, Nemeth LS, Fiefer C, Corley ST. Improving Diabetes Care through a Multi-component Quality Improvement Model in a Practice-Based Research Network. American Journal of Medical Quality, 2007; 22(1): 34-41. DOI 10.1177/1062860606295206. Miller PM, Stockdell R, Nemeth L, Fiefer C, Jenkins RG, Nietert PJ, Wessell AM, Liszka H, Ornstein SM. Initial Steps Taken by Nine Primary Care Practices to Implement Alcohol Screening Guidelines with Hypertensive Patients: The AA-TRIP Project. Substance Abuse 2006; 27(1/2):61-70.

B. Textbooks & Book Chapters

Dickerson LM, Shrader SP, Diaz V. Contraception. In: DiPiro JT, Talbert RL, Yee GC, et al., Eds. Pharmacotherapy: A Pathophysiologic Approach. 7th ed. McGraw-Hill Co. In press October 2006. Spencer AP, Weart CW Peripheral Vascular Disorders in Applied Therapeutics: The Clinical Use of Drugs for the 9th Edition; Koda-Kimble and Young Editors; by Lippincott Williams and Wilkins Lenz KL. Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation. Pharmacotherapy Self-Assessment Program, fifth edition (PSAP-V), August 2006. Nappi, JM. Acute Heart Failure and Cardiogenic Shock. In: Cardiology I, II, III. Dunsworth TS,

Richardson MM, Cheng JWM, Chessman KH, Hume AL, Hutchinson LC, Jackson AB, Karpiuk EL, Martin LG, Semla TP, Wittbrodt ET. eds. Pharmacotherapy Self-Assessment Program (PSAP) (6th Edition). The American College of Clinical Pharmacy, Lenexa, MO 2007. ACCP Task Force on Ambulatory Practice (Baker EK, Berry TM, Harris IM, Halloran MA, Hughes DB, Lindauer K, Ragucci KR, Somma MA, Taylor AT, Haines ST). Business-practice model for clinical ambulatory practice. In: Schumock GT, How to Develop a Business Plan for Clinical Pharmacy Services: A Guide for Managers and Clinicians. CD-ROM. Kansas City: American College of Clinical Pharmacy, 2006.

C. AbstractsAnger BP, Worrall C, Bosso JA: Relationship between antibiotic use, duplicate isolate definition, and susceptibilities for Pseudonomas aerugininosa in a surgical trauma intensive care unit. Crit Care Med 2006;34(Suppl):A154. Mauldin PD, Salgado CD, Bosso JA. Lack of effect of vancomycin and linezolid use on nosocomial methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus and vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus (VRE) infections. Proceedings of the 17th Annual Scientific Meeting of the Society for Healthcare Epidemiologist of American, 2007, Abstract #91. Chumney E. Development and Initiation of a Peer Evaluation Process for Classroom Teaching. AACP Annual Meeting in San Diego, CA. July 2006. Chumney E. Impact of a Hospital-acquired/Ventilator-associated/ Healthcare-associated Pneumonia Practice Guideline on Outcomes in Surgical Trauma Patients. ACCP Spring Practice and Research Forum in Memphis, TN. April 2007. Chumney E. Assessment of a Peer Evaluation Process for Classroom Teaching. Proceedings of the Charleston Connections 2007 Innovations in Higher Education Conference in Charleston, SC. May 2007. Chumney E. Cost-utility of Treatments for Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension. American College of Chest Physicians Annual Meeting in Chicago, IL. October 2007. Drayton SJ, Weinstein B. Bipolar Disorder. In: Dipiro JT, Talbert RL, Yee GC, et al., eds. Pharmacotherapy; A Pathophysiologic Approach, 7th ed. New York City: McGraw-Hill; In press. Bernard ML, Drayton SJ. Current pharmacotherapy for pediatric seizures and epilepsy. In: Current Management in Child Neurology, 4th ed. In press. Mouw EM, Garner SS, Suresh GK. Development of a preprinted pediatric discharge prescription form. Pharmacotherapy 2006; 26:e108. Poster presentation: American College of Clinical Pharmacy Annual Meeting. St. Louis, MO. October 2006. Frankel A, Weir MA, Hall PD, Holguin M, Cable C, Rizzieri DA, Hogge DE. Induction of remission in patients with acute myeloid leukemia without prolonged myelosuppression using diphtheria toxin-interleukin-3 fusion protein. Proc ASCO 2007;25(18s part I of II):373s. Hall PD, White RL. Relationships between undergraduate institution ranking and academic performance in a Doctor of Pharmacy program. Pharmacotherapy 2006;26:e62 ( Chalela JA, Ramos L, Lapointe M, Patel S. Conventional weaning parameters do not predict extubation failure in neurosurgical patients. Poster presentation at 4th Annual Neurocritical Care

Society Meeting, Baltimore, MD, 2006 Goodson KG, Lapointe JC, Chalela JC. Intraventricular nicardipine in the treatment of symptomatic cerebral vasospasm, Poster presentation at 4th Annual Neurocritical Care Society Meeting, Baltimore, MD, 2006 Wellein M. Ragucci K, Lapointe M, Nickel R. Development of a peer-evaluation process. Poster proposal and acceptance at Charleston Teaching Conference, Spring 2007. Earl M, Hogan K, Lenzk KL. Assessment of the Efficacy of Palifermin in Non-TBI-Containing Stem Cell Transplant Regimens. ACCP Annual Meeting, St. Louis MO, October 24, 2006.

Colley BJ, Maran A, Nappi J, Sturdivant JL, Leman RB, Wharton JM, Gold MR. A comparison of bleeding complications with warfarin and heparin among patients undergoing device implantation. J Am Coll Cardiol 2006;47(4):23A (abstract 969-137) Colley III BJ, Maran A, Nappi JM, Gold MR, Sturdivant LJ, Wharton JM, Leman RB. A comparison of bleeding complications associated with warfarin and heparin among patients undergoing device implantation. Heart Rhythm 2006;3 (Issue 5), S11 (abstract AB6-1)

Starr JA, Nappi JM. A retrospective analysis of nesiritide use in patients with acute decompensated heart failure. Pharmacotherapy 2006;26:e56 (abstract #41). Choy CK, Spencer AP, Nappi JM. Prevalence of anemia in heart failure patients and cost analysis of epoetin treatment. Pharmacotherapy 2006;26:e82 (abstract #200). Pallares MJ, Powers ER, Zwerner PL. Nappi JM. Barriers to adherence with clopidogrel following placement of drug eluting stents. Pharmacotherapy 2007;27:e13 (abstract #19). Thompson AN, Ragucci KR. Evaluation of Patient Perceptions and Outcomes Related to Anticoagulation Point-of-Care Testing in Ambulatory Care Clinics. Pharmacotherapy 2007;27:11. Presented at the 2007 American College of Clinical Pharmacy Meeting, Memphis, Tennessee. Devine E, Kang J, Hoffman C, Pompey D, Rodgers E, Seifert C, Singletary O, Swearingen C, Wong M, Bear B, Ragucci K. Minorities at Risk Without Affordable Health Care in South Carolina. Presented at the 2007 MUSC Presidential Scholars Day, Charleston, South Carolina. Jennings D, Ragucci K. Diabetes Related Quality of Life in an Ambulatory Care Clinic. Presented at the 2006 American Society of Health-System Pharmacists Meeting, Anaheim, California. Wellein M, Ragucci K, Lapointe M, Nickel R. Development and Initiation of a Peer Evaluation Process for Classroom Teaching. American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education 2006;70:35. Presented at the 2006 American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy Annual Meeting, San Diego, California. Presented at the 2007 Charleston Connection Conference, Charleston, South Carolina. Shrader SP, Murphy JA. The Impact of a Focused Pharmacotherapy/Research Rotation in a Family Medicine Residency Training Program. Presented at 2007 Society of Teachers of Family Medicine Annual Meeting, Chicago, Illinois. Wells D, Flynn K, Page RL, Spencer AP. Effects of Amiodarone on Argatroban Dosing. American College of Clinical Pharmacy 2007 Spring Practice and Research Forum: p. e35; Abstract # 166

Choy CK, Spencer AP, Nappi JN. Prevalence of anemia in patients with heart failure and cost analysis of epoetin treatment. American College of Clinical Pharmacy 2006 Annual Meeting, p. e82; Abstract # 200

D. Other (non-refereed publication)Chumney ECG and Simpson KN. Calculating study power for

economic analyses alongside clinical trials. ISPOR Connections 2006. 12(6): 8-10. Samir H, Anne Wojner Alexandrov AW, Lapointe M. Optimal Pharmacologic Management of Acute Hypertensive Crises. Lenz KL.Treatments for Breast Cancer. University HealthSystem Consortium Monograph Reviewer. Oak Brook IL, May 2007. Murphy JE, Saseen JJ, Nappi J, Bosso JA. Comments on draft of work force document. Am J Health Syst Pharm 2006;63:1592 (letter). Sorensen TD, Anderson W, Delafuente JC, Diamond L, Nappi J, Pieper J. AACP Reports. Professional Practice Plans: Recommendations from the 2005 Council of Faculties – Council of Deans task force. Am J Pharm Educ 2006;70(3) article S03. B. Web-Based Pharmacotherapy Curriculum – Family Medicine Residents in South Carolina. Contraception, Sexually Transmitted Diseases, Drugs in Pregnancy. Shrader SP. Lifestyle Modifications. www.teachprevention.org. April 2007.

3. PRESENTATIONS

A. Invited Presentations

John Bosso Current Concepts in the Treatment of Pneumonia, Georgia Medical Center Pharmacy Conference, Macon, GA 2006. New Antimicrobial Update, MUSC Infectious Diseases Pharmacotherapy Symposium, Charleston, SC 2006. Pharmacotherapeutic Options in the Treatment of Invasive Fungal Infections, Ohio Chapter, American College of Clinical Pharmacy, Cleveland, OH 2006. The History, Current and Future Role of the Pharmacist In Antibiotic Management, California Society of Health-System Pharmacists Seminar 2006, Sacramento, CA 2006. Current concepts in the epidemiology and treatment of community-acquired pneumonia, University of Arizona 13th Annual Winter CE Lectures and Workshops, Park City, UT 2006. An overview of newer quinolone antibiotics, Beaufort Naval Hospital, Beaufort, SC 2007. Antimicrobial Stewardship: The Pharmacy Perspective, 7th Annual Carolinas Antimicrobial Stewardship Effort (CASE) Meeting, Charleston, SC 2007. Trends in Antimicrobial Resistance, Phi Delta Chi Alumni Weekend CE Program, Charleston, SC 2007.

Nosocomial Pathogens and their Resistance Patterns. 10th Annual Making a Difference in Infectious Diseases Pharmacotherapy Meeting, Orlando, FL 2007. Elinor Chumney The Effect of VA Pharmacist Interventions on Diabetic Outcomes. Presentation to the Veterans Administration Targeted Research Enhancement Project (TREP) Steering Committee in Charleston, SC on October 6, 2006.

Data Coding from Medical Records. Workshop for MUSC COP residents on October 19, 2006.

Shannon Drayton ADHD, What you need to know, Med-U-Way. ACPE accredited CE Program. Medical University of South Carolina. 2007. Peter Edwards Contributed Presentation Preceptor Workshops (Charleston and Columbia, 2 hours of CE) Pharmacy Law Review for Fourth-Year Students With Banks Smith, April 14, 2007 Sandra Garner Bugology: Neonatal late-onset sepsis. Continuing education for staff nurses in the MUSC Children’s Hospital. November 16, 2006 8:30am. Bugology: Neonatal late-onset sepsis. Continuing education for staff nurses in the MUSC Children’s Hospital. November 16, 2006 6:00pm. Pediatric Medication Errors Update. Phi Delta Chi Alumni Weekend. Charleston, SC. March 24, 2007.

Pediatric Medication Safety and Treatment of Common Conditions. Florence Crittenton Residential Program. Charleston, SC. March 27, 2007. Poison Prevention. Florence Crittenton Residential Program. Charleston, SC. April 24, 2007. Philip Hall Update of Supportive Care in Oncology. Lowcountry Oncology, Nursing Society, Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, November 18,2006.

Drugs in Development with Novel Mechanisms of Action: Oncology & Immunology. American College of Clinical Pharmacy Annual Meeting , Saint Louis, Missouri, October 29, 2006. Marc Lapointe Deep vein thrombosis prophylaxis in high risk patients, Society of Critical Care Medicine, Carolina-Virginia Chapter, Raleigh, NC, 2007. The pharmacotherapy of stress ulcer, deep vein thrombosis and seizure prophylaxis, Society of Critical Care Medicine, Orlando, FL, 2007. Pharmacotherapy updates in neurosciences, MUSC Critical Care Nursing Retreat, Charleston, SC, 2007. Stroke and Hypertensive crisis, Alabama Society of Health-System Pharmacists, Pelham, AL, 2006.

Stroke Update, South Carolina Academy of Physician Assistants (SCAPA), Kiawah, SC, 2006. New antiepileptic agents, South Carolina Academy of Physician Assistants (SCAPA), Kiawah, SC, 2006. Seizure prophylaxis, Charleston Chapter of the American Association of Neurological Nurses (AANN), Charleston, SC 2006. Kristi Lenz

Pharmaceutical Care for Women’s Health: Breast and Ovarian CancersUniversity of Florida Working Professionals Doctor of Pharmacy Degree, Orlando FL, May 14, 2007 Oral Anti-Cancer Therapy Update for Primary Care Practitioners The New Drug Update, Charleston SC, May 11, 2007 Oral Anti-Cancer Drugs: What Community Pharmacists Need to Know MUSC Phi Delta Chi Alumni Weekend, Charleston SC, March 24, 2007 Use of Analgesics in the Elderly Geriatric Symposium, Columbia SC, February 10, 2007

Pharmaceutical Care for Renal Disorders: Bladder and Prostate Cancers University of Florida Working Professionals Doctor of Pharmacy Degree, Orlando FL, February 9, 2007

Chemotherapy-Induced Nausea/Vomiting Advanced Practice Nurses, Greenville SC, August 22, 2006 Jean Nappi The truth about niacin. Pharmacy Update 2006. South Carolina College of Pharmacy.. Charleston SC. September 2006 Cardiovascular disease in women. the MedUWay. Medical University of South Carolina.. Charleston, SC. September 2006 Post Graduate Residency and Fellowship Training: Is it for you? American College of Clinical Pharmacy Annual Meeting. St. Louis, MO October 2006.

Successfully Navigating an Academic Career. Seminar to the Department of Pharmacy and Clinical Sciences. Medical University of South Carolina. Charleston, SC. November 2006 Evaluating the evidence for use of niacin in hyperlipidemia. University of Arizona 13th Annual Winter CE Lectures and Workshops. Park City, UT. December 2006 Acute Decompensated Heart Failure: What would you do? Cardiology Practice and Research Network Meeting. American College of Clinical Pharmacy. Memphis, TN. April 2007. Preventing Adverse Drug Events: what every clinician needs to know. 25th Annual Cardiology Conference. Bellinhealth Heart and Vascular Center. Green Bay, WI. May 2007. Considerations in Preventing Adverse Drug Events. New Drug Update sponsored by the Medical University of South Carolina Office of Continuing Medical Education. Charleston, SC. May 2007.

Preventing Adverse Drug Events: what every clinician needs to know. Pharmacy Update 2007. South Carolina College of Pharmacy. Charleston SC. June 2007 Ronald Nickel A History of American Pharmacy- Student Medical History Club. December 13, 2006- Waring Historical Library. Kelly Ragucci Sexually Transmitted Diseases: A Focus on the New Guidelines. Intensive Review of Family Medicine Annual Meeting. Kiawah Island, South Carolina. June 2007. New Drug Update Meeting. Charleston, South Carolina. May 2007. Phi Delta Chi Continuing Education Weekend. Charleston, South Carolina. March 2007. Pearls for Precepting Pharmacy Students and Residents on Ambulatory Care Clinical Rotations. American College of Clinical Pharmacy Spring Meeting. April 2007. Sarah Shrader Emergency Contraception. Medical University of South Carolina Lunch Seminar Series for medical, pharmacy, and nursing students. Sponsored by Medical Students for Choice Organization. Feb. 2007. Gibson M, Dickerson L, Hueston W, Jacobson L, Shrader S. Achieving Treatment Goals in Diabetes Mellitus Management: Patient-centered Collaborative Diabetes Program for Primary Care. Presented at 2007 Society of Teachers of Family Medicine Annual Meeting, Chicago, Illinois. April 2007. The Role of Varenicline for Smoking Cessation. New Drug Update Medical University of South Carolina Department of Family Medicine. May 2007. Anne Spencer Outpatient Cardiology. 2006 Updates in Therapeutics: The Pharmacotherapy Preparatory Course. American College of Clinical Pharmacy Spring Practice and Research Forum, Memphis, TN 2007 Thiazolidinediones and Metformin are Safe in Heart Failure regardless of Functional Class (Debate format-statement against). American College of Clinical Pharmacy Annual Meeting, St. Louis, MO 2006. Enhancing Your Evaluation Skills South Carolina Society of Health-System Pharmacists. Fall Seminar, Columbia, SC 2006. Wayne Weart New Drug Update, SC Primary Care Physicians, Kiawah, SC July 7, 2006 CE Cruise (Hypertension, Lipids, Heart Failure, Type 2 Diabetes, Asthma and COPD) 10 day Mediterranean Cruise out of Rome, July 20-30, 2006 Key note speaker SCCP MUSC campus White Coat Ceremony, August 22, 2006 New Drug Update, BC/BS HMO Blue provider conference, Kiawah, SC Sept 2, 2006 New Drug Update, Sumter County Medical Society, Sumter, Sept 7, 2006 COX-2 NSAID Update on Pain, USC School of Medicine Conference, Hilton Head, Sept 16, 2006 New Drug Update, Medical Grand Rounds, Palmetto Baptist Medical Center, Columbia, SC, Oct 3, 2006 New Drug Update, SC Advanced Practice Nurses Annual Conference, Hilton Head, SC Oct. 6, 2006 Diabetes Update, MUSC College of Pharmacy, Alumni Weekend CE, Oct 7, 2006

Diabetes Update, Low Country Pharmacy Assoc, Oct 10, 2006 Diabetes Update, Dept of Family Practice, Roper/St. Francis Medical Center, Charleston, Oct 13, 2006 New Drug Update, Southern Medical Assoc Annual Meeting, Charlotte, NC, Oct 14, 2006 New Drug Update, SC Chapter ASCP, Myrtle Beach, SC Oct 15, 2006 New Drug Update, Dept of Internal Medicine, Roper/St. Francis Medical Center, Charleston, Nov 9, 2006 New Drug Update, MUSC Pediatric Update Conference, Charleston, SC Dec 1, 2006 New Drug Update, SCPhA CE Escape Weekend, Hilton Head, SC Dec 2, 2006 New Drug Update, Low Country Medical Associates, Charleston, Dec 3, 2006 Pharmacy Update of Type 2 Diabetes, MUSC HCN Broadcast, Dec 12, 2006 Update on Hypertension, USC School of Medicine, Dept of Endocrinology, Dec 14, 2006 Cardiovascular Update, Charleston Navy Hospital Medical staff Jan 18, 2007 Cardiovascular Update, Lenoir County Medical Society, Feb 7, 2007 Metabolic Syndrome Management, Southern Medical Assoc, New Orleans, Feb 10,2007 New Drug Update, Dept of Pediatrics, Roper/St Francis Hospital, Charleston, SC Feb 22, 2007 New Drug Update, SC Advanced Practice Nurses Course, Charleston, SC Feb 23, 2007 Update on the Management of Type 2 Diabetes, SC DHEC Annual Diabetes Meeting, Myrtle Beach, Feb 24,2007 New Drug Update, NE Georgia Medical Center, GA Mountain Center, Gainesville, March 1, 2007 History of Pharmacy in Charleston, SC, MUSC College of Pharmacy,HCN Pharmacy Update Broadcast, March 13, 2007 Cardiovascular Update, Low-Country Pharmacy Assoc, Charleston, March 20, 2007 New Drug Update, MUSC Chapter of Phi Delta Chi Alumni Seminar, Charleston, SC March 24, 2007 New Drug Update, Grand Rounds, Palmetto Baptist Medical center, Columbia, SC March 27, 2007 Hypertension Update, MUSC Department of Endocrinology, April 5, 2007 Cardiovascular Update, Department of Family Medicine McLeod Medical Center, Florence, May 24, 2007 New Drug Update, Family Medicine Review Course, Howard University, Washington, DC June 3, 2007 New Drug Update, BC/BS of SC provider meeting, Wild Dunes, SC June 9, 2007 Cardiovascular Update, Christian Pharmacists Fellowship International, Annual Meeting, Myrtle Beach, SC June 11, 2007 New Drug Update, University learning Systems, Las Vegas, June 13-14, 2007 Update on Hypertension, MUSC Dept of Family Medicine Review Course, Kiawah, SC June 20, 2007 New Drug Update, MUSC Dept of Family Medicine Review Course, Kiawah, SC June 20, 2007 New Drug Update, SCPhA Annual Convention, Myrtle Beach, SC June 21-22, 2007 Marlea Wellein Creating Exemplary Experiential Education: Models of Successful Academic-Practice Partnerships, 41st ASHP midyear meeting, Anaheim, CA 2006. Development and Initiation of a Peer Evaluation Process for Classroom Teaching, 5th Annual Charleston Connections Conference, Charleston, SC 2007. Andrea Wessell Evaluating Residents. MUSC Residency Program Preceptors Conference. Charleston, SC 2006. The Impact of a Clinical Pharmacy Diabetes Program in the Ambulatory Care Setting. Endocrine and Metabolism PRN Focus Session—Achieving Quality Diabetes Outcomes in Pharmacy Diabetes Services at the Annual Meeting of the American College of Clinical Pharmacy, St Louis, MO 2006. Achievable Benchmarks of Care™ in the Practice Partner Research Network, 11th Annual Practice Partner Research Network Meeting, Charleston, SC 2006.

Pattern Management and Establishing/Managing a Diabetes Practice. Diabetes Primer: Skill Building for the Practicing Pharmacist, South Carolina College of Pharmacy, University of South Carolina Campus, Columbia, SC 2006.

B. Contributed Presentations

Kristi Lenz Earl M, Hogan K, Lenzk KL. Assessment of the Efficacy of Palifermin in Non-TBI-Containing Stem Cell Transplant Regimens. ACCP Annual Meeting, St. Louis MO, October 24, 2006.

Jean Nappi A comparison of bleeding complications associated with warfarin and heparin among patients undergoing device implantation. Meeting of the Heart Rhythm Society, Boston MA. May 2006 A retrospective analysis of nesiritide use in patients with acute decompensated heart failure. Meeting of the American College of Clinical Pharmacy, St. Louis, MO 2006 Prevalence of anemia in heart failure patients and cost analysis of epoetin treatment. Meeting of the American College of Clinical Pharmacy, St. Louis, MO 2006 A comparison of bleeding complications with warfarin and heparin among patients undergoing device implantation. Meeting of the American College of Cardiology, New Orleans LA 2007 Barriers to adherence with clopidogrel following placement of drug eluting stents. Meeting of the American College of Clinical Pharmacy, Memphis, TN Kelly Ragucci Thompson AN, Ragucci KR. Evaluation of Patient Perceptions and Outcomes Related to Anticoagulation Point-of-Care Testing in Ambulatory Care Clinics. Pharmacotherapy 2007;27:11. Presented at the 2007 American College of Clinical Pharmacy Meeting, Memphis, Tennessee. Devine E, Kang J, Hoffman C, Pompey D, Rodgers E, Seifert C, Singletary O, Swearingen C, Wong M, Bear B, Ragucci K. Minorities at Risk Without Affordable Health Care in South Carolina. Presented at the 2007 MUSC Presidential Scholars Day, Charleston, South Carolina. Jennings D, Ragucci K. Diabetes Related Quality of Life in an Ambulatory Care Clinic. Presented at the 2006 American Society of Health-System Pharmacists Meeting, Anaheim, California. Wellein M, Ragucci K, Lapointe M, Nickel R. Development and Initiation of a Peer Evaluation Process for Classroom Teaching. American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education 2006;70:65. Presented at the 2006 American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy Annual Meeting, San Diego, California. Presented at the 2007 Charleston Connection Conference, Charleston, South Carolina. Anne Spencer How to Design your Experiential Rotation: An Active Learning Workshop. South Carolina College of Pharmacy Preceptor Conference. Columbia and Charleston, SC, 2006. Andrea Wessell Achievable Benchmarks of Care™ for a Diverse Set of Primary Care Quality Indicators. Annual Meeting of the North American Primary Care Research Group, Tucson, Arizona 2006.

4. GRANTS, CONTRACTS, AWARDS AND GIFTS

A. Grants

John Bosso Infectious Diseases Pharmacotherapy Annual CE Program, 2006 (funded – various; $33,500). Linking vancomycin and linezolid usage patterns to the incidence of methicillin-resistant S. aureus and vancomycin- and linezolid-resistant enterococci, 2006- (funded, Cubist Pharmaceuticals; $48,155). Analysis of Effect of Changes in Usage Patterns of Carbapenems with a Formulary Switch from Imipenem to Meropenem on Susceptibility/resistance of Gram-negative Pathogens and Costs of Treatment of Associated Infections, 2007-9 (funded, AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals; $131,638).

Grants submitted (not funded) R21 Resubmission Application. Identification and characterization of Antibiotic Use – Resistance Relationships. Principal Investigator, 25% FTE, July 2007 – June 2009, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease / NIH; $401,500. Elinor Chumney Economic and Quality of Life Component for the Phase III Clinical Trials of Tipranavir, Investigator, 20% FTE 2005-2006, Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals, $198,270. The Effect of VA Pharmacist Interventions on Diabetic Outcomes. Principal Investigator, 63% FTE 2007-2009, Veterans Affairs Health Services Research and Development Career Development Application (CDA), $378,900 (Not funded). Computer Aided Cancer Management – Nicotine Replacement. Investigator 30% FTE 2007. Department of Defense (DOD). $289,221. Southeastern Predoctoral Training in Clinical Research. Investigator 10% FTE 2007. National Institutes of Health (NIH). Sandra Garner Safety of N-acetylcysteine in maternal chorioamnionitis, Co-Investigator, 7% FTE Year 1, 15% Years 2 and 3, NIH; $1,567,473.

Marc Lapointe CTSA / High-Dose estrogen for spinal cord injury, Co-Principal Investigator, Study coordinator, 5% FTE, 04/01/07-3/30/08; $ 50,000 CTSA / Alzheimer Disease and Acquired Macular Degeneration. Sub-investigator, Grant submission, 0% FTE, 04/01/07-3/30/08; $ 50,000. ARANESP for anemia in the ICU, Principal Investigator, 5% FTE, 10/01/06-9/30/08, Jenica Research, $ 50,000.

Recombinant Factor VII for Hemorrhagic Stroke (FAST), Co-Principal Investigator, Co-Study Coordinator, 5% FTE, 10/1/05-03/1/07, Novo Nordisk; $ 45,000. Minimal Invasive Surgery plus r-tPA for Intracranial Hemorrhage Evacuation (MISTIE), Co-Principal Investigator, Co-Study Coordinator, 1/1/05-12/31/08, 5% FTE, NIH/NINDS/NACABI/Johns Hopkins; $

391,539.

Phase II, Randomized Pharmacokinetic, Dose Finding and Dose Frequency Determination using rt-PA in Intraventricular Hemorrhage, Co-Principal Investigator, Co-Study Coordinator, 5% FTE, 9/15/04-9/14/07, FDA/Johns Hopkins; $ 28,000. Phase II, Randomized Pharmacokinetic, Dose Finding and Dose Frequency Determination using rt-PA in Intraventricular Hemorrhage, Co-Principal Investigator, Co-Study Coordinator, 5% FTE, 1/1/04-9/14/07, FDA/Johns Hopkins; $ 35,160. Kristi Lenz Advanced Education Nursing Grants: Palliative Care Project #85032, Grant #5D09HP03381-02-00, PI = Edlund BJ 10% of salary through July 2007 Patrick Mauldin Principal Investigator. “Ethnic Differences in Medication Adherence & Cost for Elderly Veterans with Type-II Diabetes Mellitus”, Conditional Approval (Response to Conditions submitted 4/24/2007). Department of Veterans Affairs Merit Grant (IIR 06-219-2), September 2007 – August 2009; $190,100 (directs); 53% VA effort. Co-Investigator. “SC Medicaid Academic Detailing Program” Voris (SCCP) – PI, SC Medicaid Program. July 2006 – June 2007; $936,000: 20% effort.

“Neurological Emergencies Treatment Trials (NETT) Network Statistical and Data Management Center” Palesch – PI, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke / NIH (NINDS - U01 NS059041-01), September 2006 – August 2011; $727,794: 15% - 20% effort. “Analysis of Effect of Changes in Usage Patterns of Carbapenems with a Formulary Switch from Imipenem to Meropenem on Susceptibility/resistance of Gram-negative Pathogens and Costs of Treatment of Associated Infections” Bosso – PI. Astra Zeneca. July 2007 – March 2009; $132,888: 20% effort.

Grants Pending “Evaluating Predictor Interventions in Sphincter of Oddi Dysfunction (EPISOD).” PI- Cotton. Co-Investigator, 5% FTE, NIDDK / NIH, December 2007 – December 2012; resubmission to be June 2007 (previous submission scored 216).

“Telephone-delivered, education and behavioral skills training intervention in high risk Blacks with poorly controlled T2DM.” PI- Egede. Co-Investigator, 10% FTE, NIDDK/NIH, December 2007 – December 2012; Submission to be June 2007. “Telemedicine-based Cognitive Processing Therapy for Combat related PTSD.” PI- Moreland (Honolulu VAMC). Co – Investigator, 10% FTE, VA HSR&D, December 2007 - December 2007 – December 2012; Submission to be June 2007.

Jean Nappi Educational Grant for Pharmacotherapy Residency 2006-07, Amgen, $38,590

Ronald Nickel KOS Pharmaceuticals- $5000- an educational grant to support the state-wide telecast (Pharmacy Update 06) entitled “ The Truth About Niacin”

My role: program coordinator, moderator Date: September 12, 2006 Viewing sites: 26, participant: 426 Kelly Ragucci Ragucci KR (principal investigator), Shrader SP. Assessing Smoking Cessation Rates in Ambulatory Care Clinics. Research grant, Pfizer Pharmaceuticals, $5,000.00. 2007-2008. Devine E, Kang J, Hoffman C, Pompey D, Rodgers E, Seifert C, Singletary O, Swearingen C, Wong M, Bear B, Ragucci K (co-investigator). Minorities at Risk Without Affordable Health Care in South Carolina. MUSC Presidential Scholars Program; $8,000.00 (offset salary). 2006-2007. Shara Shrader Assessment of Clinical Pharmacy Screening and Cessation Program, Co-investigator, 2007-2008, $5000

Wayne Weart Unrestricted educational grants in excess of $20,000 to support the Annual New Drug Update Meeting

Marlea Wellein 1. Submitted but not awarded (in conjunction with Anne Spencer): Safety of High Concentration Vancomycin versus Linezolid for Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus (MRSA) Infections, co-principal investigator, 15% salary, 2 years, Health Sciences South Carolina, $177,225.

Andrea Wessell 1. Administrative Supplement to the Translation of Research into Practice for Alcohol Screening in

Patients with Hypertension, Co-investigator, 5% FTE, 2006-2007, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, $57,377.

2. Accelerating the Translation of Research into Practice (A-TRIP) in a Practice-based Research

Network, Grant number U18 HS13716, Co-investigator, 30% FTE, 9/30/2002-9/29/2006, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), $1.3 million.

Don Wiest 1. Safety of N-acetylcysteine in Maternal Chorioamnionitis, R01-NS052448, Co-Investigator,

Executive Committee Member, 15%, 20%, 20% FTE 2007-2010, NIH, $1,567,473.00. 2. HPLC equipment grant for Safety of N-acetylcysteine in Maternal Chorioamnionitis, $23,000

(Department of Pediatrics- $10,000 NS052448- $13000).

B. Contracts

Ronald Nickel The contracts in which I have been involved deal almost exclusively with providing some aspect of Continuing Education for pharmacists and other health care professionals. Pharmacy Technician Educator Council, to provide continuing education credit, develop the program Handout, etc, for their annual meeting in Minneapolis, MN ,7/20-7/22, 03 Revenue based on per certificate fee and per Handout charge, Net revenue: $1540.00

Omnicare Inc ( a national long term care pharmacy corporation)-

To accredit and provide support for two one-day educational programs (Charleston and Spartanburg). Revenue is based on a per certificate charge of $15.00,and administrative fee of $250, and selected rental fees for needed AV equipment( LCD projector). In addition, development and printing of the program Handout was “at cost”

MAD –ID 2007- For accreditation and support of the MAD 2007 program in Orlando, Florida $5500.00 College of Medicine( Family Medicine)- New Drug Update- 5/10-5/13,07 For accreditation of this three day program. Revenue based on administrative fee of $500.00 plus $15.00/statement of credit issued.

Context Healthcare Group(Canada)- $4000.00 to accredit 5 “live” presentations of “Curbing MRSA” and a resulting Monograph. Contract also provided $5.00/statement of credit arising from the “live” sessions and from the post-test of the Monograph.

South Carolina Chapter- American Society of Consultant Pharmacists- 2006 Post-graduate Geriatric Symposium- for general support and accrediting of CE elements- $1700.00 fee. Diabetes Initative of South Carolina (MUSC) – for support of and accreditation of CE components of the Annual Diabetes Symposium-

Andrea Wessell Practice Partner®-PPRNet Contract from Department of Family Medicine, 9% FTE, 10/1/2007-6/30/2007. Co-investigator, Primary Care Research Practice-Based Research Network Task Order Contract, AHRQ, 1/29/2007-1/29/2010. (%FTE will based on task orders)

C. Awards & Gifts

Donna Harrison Awards & Gifts QS/1 pharmacy information system, requestor, given 7/06 Donated by QS/1 to SCCP, $4000/year Book review for Morton Publishing Company completed. Applied Pharmaceutics in Contemporary Comopunding Small honorarium provided

Marc Lapointe Educational Grant, UCB Pharma, $ 1,500

5. HONORS/AWARDS

Sandra Garner Recipient, MUSC Foundations Teaching Excellence Award, Educator-Mentor category Jean Nappi Education Award, American College of Clinical Pharmacy, October 2006 In recognition of sustained and outstanding contributions to clinical pharmacy education Kelly Ragucci

Fellow, MUSC Trustee Leadership Academy, 2006-2007 Clinical Services Recognition Award, MUSC, 2006-2007 Presidential Faculty Scholar 2006-2007 Wayne Weart 2007 Professor of the Year for the MUSC College of Pharmacy 3rd year class Clinical Services Recognition Award from the MUSC Medical Center

6. PEER REVIEW/EDITORIAL BOARDS/EDITORSHIPS FOR JOURNALS

John Bosso Editorial Board Member

Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, 2002- Pharmacotherapy 1993- Journal of Pediatric Pharmacology and Therapeutics, 2000-

Reviewer 2005-6 American Journal of Infection Control American Journal of Medical Sciences American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy Clinical Pharmacokinetics Clinical Infectious Diseases

European Journal of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases Journal of Clinical Microbiology Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal Pharmacotherapy Sandra Garner Peer Reviewer, Critical Care Medicine Peer Reviewer, Journal of Pediatric Pharmacotherapy and Therapeutics Peer Reviewer, American Journal of Health-Systems Pharmacists

Philip Hall Peer review, Pharmacotherapy x 2 manuscripts Peer review, American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education x 1 manuscript

Marc Lapointe Reviewer, Critical Care Medicine Reviewer, American Journal of Health-System Pharmacists Reviewer, Clinical Therapeutics

Kristi Lenz Reviewer, Annals of Pharmacotherapy Hematology/Oncology Editorial Board, Annals of Pharmacotherapy

Patrick Mauldin Scientific Merit Review Board, Health Services Research & Development, Department of Veterans Affairs, 2006 – present.

Manuscript reviewer for multiple peer-reviewed journals.

Jean Nappi Reviewer, Annals of Pharmacotherapy (#3) Reviewer, American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education (#2) Editorial board; Cardiology Panel, Annals of Pharmacotherapy Kelly Ragucci The impact of diabetes education on improving patient outcomes. Insulin 2007;2:24-30. Hansen LB, Saseen JJ, Teal SB. Alternative levonorgestrel dosing strategies for emergency contraception. Pharmacotherapy 2007;27:278-84.

Sarah Shrader Reviewer Annals of Pharmacotherapy: 1 article; Jan. 2007 Anne Spencer Reviewer, Current Medical Research and Opinion Wayne Weart Board of Special Consultants (Pharmacology) – Patient Care (a primary care journal) I also am a reviewer for this journal term expired 12/2006

Editorial Advisory Board and reviewer for The Pharmacists Letter and The Prescriber’s Letter Section Editor on gastroenterology APhA Drug-Infoline Reviewer Am J Pharmaceutical Education Reviewer Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine Reviewer American Journal of Health-Systems Pharmacy Reviewer Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics

Andrea Wessell Reviewer, Annals of Pharmacotherapy Reviewer, Implementation Science

7. CLINICAL SERVICE

John Bosso Clinical Specialist, Infectious Diseases: 2 months Shannon Drayton Clinical Specialist, Acute General Psychiatry, General Psychiatry, BICU eight months Clinical Specialist, Psychiatry on-call, 16 weeks In-service education (# hours) CORE, 3 hours

PGY3 Psychopharmacology Series, 9 hours

Sandra Garner Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, MUH Children’s Hospital, every other week Thursday through Wednesday including weekend monitoring Pediatric on-call service including monitored drug service: 67 days including 3 primary weekends (Friday through Sunday), 7 faculty back-up weekends (Friday through Sunday), and 1 holiday Inservice education (5)

Philip Hall Clinical Specialist, Hematology/Oncology, Medical University Hospital, 4 months Inservice Education, 4 hours

Kristi Lenz Clinical Specialist, Oncology/Hematology 8 service months Clinical Specialist, Gynecologic Oncology 12 service months (avg = 6-8 questions/week) Clinical Specialist, Palliative Care Service 12 service months (avg = 2-4 questions/month) Clinical Specialist Back-Up, Adult On-Call 4 service weeks

Inservice Education Total = 8 inservices

Jean Nappi Cardiology, inpatient service 1 month Cardiology, heart failure clinic, 12 months per year

Ronald Nickel Served to supplement the professional staff of Family Medicine Pharmacy during the absences of Ms. Terri Soltice.. This was on a as-needed basis and involved the equivalent of one week of service during the 2006-07 period. Kelly Ragucci Clinical Specialist, Family Medicine Outpatient, 3 months (taking into account maternity leave) Clinical Specialist, Family Medicine Inpatient, 4 months (taking into account maternity leave) Inservice Education – 4 hours

Sarah Shrader MUSC Department of Family Medicine Outpatient Clinic – 5 months Inpatient Service – 3 months Family Medicine PharmD on-call system: 2 months primary call, 1 month back-up for Primary Care Resident Anne Spencer Clinical Specialist, Internal Medicine MUH, 4 months/year

Clinical Specialist, Cardiology MUH, 4 months/year Adult On-call MUH, 5 weeks

Wayne Weart Coordinator MUSC Medical Center Med-U-Way program, a monthly program for conference for all MUSC providers including CE for physicians, pharmacists, nurses, physician assistants and respiratory therapists. Program is sponsored by the MUSC Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee. I also serve as a drug therapy consultant to numerous physicians, pharmacists, nurses and physician assistants both within the MUSC family and in the community.

Marlea Wellein Clinical Specialist, Internal Medicine Provided service to 2 IM teams for 8 months of service (average about 100-130 pts/month) Provided in-services (in conjunction with pharmacy residents and students) to MDs and RNs as needed on pharmacy related topics. Each resident/student gives about 5-10 min in-service (at least two topics per month) Performed noon conference for IM medicine residents: Antibiotic overview (August 2004) (1hr)

Coverage of medicine services Cardiology, Renal, Pulmonary, and other medicine teams On call Completed 5 weeks of call

Andrea Wessell Ambulatory Care, MUSC Family Medicine Center, 5 months Inpatient Family Medicine, MUH, 6 months (4 months primary, 2 months on-call maternity leave coverage) Co-coordinator, Pharmacy Volunteer Services, Crisis Ministries Medical Clinic (8 mos/yr, 3 hrs/wk)

Don Wiest

Clinical Specialist, Pediatrics Pediatrics, Pediatric Intensive Care- 4 months Pediatrics, General Pediatrics- 4 months Inservice education- 3 hrs

8. COMMITTEE SERVICE

A. University Committee Service

John Bosso Member, Conflict of Interest Committee, 2005- Member, Comprehensive Standards Regarding Faculty, Students, & Learning Resources Committee

(SACS Reaffirmation), 2005-7 Member, Dean of College of Health Sciences Search Committee, 2006-7 CTSA Education & Training Workgroup, 2006- Member, Basic Science Teaching Task Force, 2007- Elinor Chumney Senator, Faculty Senate COP Representative, Teaching Excellence Awards Review Committee Member, Center for Health Economics and Policy Studies (CHEPS) Steering Committee Member, Apple Tree Society Steering Committee Member, MUSC Southeastern Predoctoral Training in Clinical Research (SPTCR) Program Member, Graduate Faculty Member, Medical University of South Carolina's Women Scholars

Shannon Drayton Member, Apple Tree Steering Committee

Peter Edwards Yes Campaign Committee Sandra Garner Member, Institutional Review Board II Member, SACS Accreditation Programs Subcommittee

Philip Hall

Member, University Education Advisory Committee Member, SAC re-affirmation Program Committee Member, University Research Committee Member, Quality Enhancement Project Coordinating Council

Arnold Karig Deans Council Academic Deans Council Safety Patrick Mauldin Faculty Senate, Medical University of South Carolina, 2004 – present. Faculty Senate Executive Committee, Medical University of South Carolina, 2004 – present. Faculty Senate Communication and Education Committee, MUSC, 2006 – present. MUSC Academic/Research Space Backfill Subcommittee, 2005 – present.

Ronald Nickel University Continuing Education Committee- University Honor Council Member- Executive Committee of the Waring Library Society Member-Board of Directors, Waring Library Society

Kelly Ragucci MUSC Trustees Leadership Academy Fellow Presidential Scholars Program (elected) Apple Tree Society Steering Committee

Anne Spencer Facilitator, Interprofessional Day Member, Outstanding Clinician Award Selection Committee

Marlea Wellein Center on Aging Executive Committee: work with a multiple disciplinary committee to promote education, research of the elderly across the campus.

Interprofessional Experience Committee: participated on committee designing IPE 2nd year experience. Participated in facilitating the Interprofessional day for both 1st and 2nd years. Evalue Committee: represented the college of pharmacy on this committee charged with the “how to” implement evalue (in place of PACE) for student evaluations.

Andrea Wessell Member, MUSC Center on Aging Executive Committee Member, Faculty Senate Faculty Senate representative, Evaluation Oversight Committee Faculty Senate representative, E*Value Implementation Oversight Committee Faculty facilitator, Interprofessional Day

Don Wiest Member, IRB

B. College of Pharmacy Committee Service

John Bosso Member, Admissions Committee, 2003- Elinor Chumney Member, Student Activities Committee Member, Information Technology Committee Member, Student Grievances Committee Regularly conducted applicant interviews

Shannon Drayton MUSC Member, Admissions MUSC Member, Assessment SCCP Member, Admissions SCCP Member, Assessment

Peter Edwards SCCP Admissions Committee- provided orientation w/ Dr. Phil Hall for prospective students on Mondays and Fridays (Co-Chair) SCCP Assessment Committee Scholastic Standing Committee Recruiting Committee (Coordinator) College of Pharmacy Yes Campaign Representative

Sandra Garner Member, SCCP Curriculum Committee Chair, MUSC Curriculum Committee

Philip Hall Member, SCCP Admissions MUSC sub-Committee Member, SCCP Assessment Committee Member, SCCP Curriculum Committee Member, SCCP Administrative Operations Committee Chair, MUSC Assessment Committee Member, MUSC Administrative Advisory Council

Donna Harrison Member, Admissions Committee Member, Honor Council Member, Sexual Harassment Member, Ad-Hoc WebCT-vs-Blackboard Member, USP Representative (membership attached)

Arnold Karig Student Activities Committee SCCP Advisory Committee Operations Committee Marc Lapointe College Representative, AACP

Member, Admission Committee Member, APT Committee

Kristi Lenz SCCP Assessment Committee (Co-Chair) Drafted Assessment Plan for ACPE visit in May 2007 SCCP Curriculum Committee

Patrick Mauldin MUSC College of Pharmacy APT Committee, 2005-present. SCCP Faculty Governance Committee, 2005 – present. SCCP Research Committee, 2004 – present. SCCP Assessment Committee, 2007 – present. USC College of Pharmacy Faculty Search Committee, Columbia, SC, 2005 – present.

Jean Nappi Member, Core Values (Ad hoc committee)

Ronald Nickel Student Activity Committee- Mr. Steve Brown, Chair MUSC Curriculum Committee COP Other: Assistant Curator of the Hoch Pharmacy Museum Steering/Planning Committee of the MedUWay educational programs Participates in the Orientation of Pharmacy Residents, pertaining to their required ACPE-approved Seminar presentations.

Kelly Ragucci Chair, Scholastic Standing Committee Faculty Search Committee SCCP Student Policy Committee Pharmacy Residency Committee

Sarah Shrader Member; South Carolina College of Pharmacy Curriculum Committee member Anne Spencer Chair, Awards, Hooding and Scholarship Committee

Wayne Weart Curriculum Committee member (MUSC campus until 9,2006) Admissions Committee member MUSC COP Appointment, Promotions and Tenure Committee MUSC COP SCCP Curriculum Committee – Co-chair USC College of Pharmacy – Graduate Committee member for Phyllis Perkins MUSC College of Graduate Studies - Graduate Committee for Pam Mazyck and Jennifer M. Brown SC Medicaid Grant, Expert Panel Member (SCORxE) and consultant to Dr Sarah Ball

Marlea Wellein College of Pharmacy Committee Service

MUSC Assessment Committee: reviewed the surveys performed by 2nd-4th year MUSC pharmacy students. Attended meetings with students to discuss comments. Assisted with writing report of their comments and suggestions, which was distributed to the faculty. SCCP Curriculum Committee: participated in development/implementation SCCP curriculum Center for Medication Safety: Involved in giving community presentations on medication safety. Evaluate and participate in CMS web page.

Andrea Wessell Member, Assessment Committee Coordinator and Advisor, Pharmacy Practice Residency Advisor, College of Pharmacy (4 P4 students, 1 P3 student)

Don Wiest Member, Dean Search (USC) Member, Curriculum (MUSC)

C. Department Committee Service

Sandra Garner Evaluator, Peer Teaching Program Marc Lapointe Chair, Peer Evaluation Teaching Group

Kristi Lenz Residency Committee (Program Director, Oncology Pharmacy Residency) Department APT Committee Ronald Nickel Peer Evaluation Task Force Kelly Ragucci Department Promotion and Tenure Committee Peer Evaluation of Teaching Committee Other - Department of Pharmacy Services

Pharmacy Residency Committee Family Medicine Continuous Quality Improvement Committee Patient and Family Education Committee Ambulatory Care POMP Project

Anne Spencer Chair, Faculty Search Committee Peer-evaluator, 2 faculty members

Marlea Wellein Peer Evaluation of Teaching: helped create the procedure and evaluation tool for peer evaluation. Coordinated pilot initiation. Academician Preparation Program: Coordinated this program as described above (under residency)

Andrea Wessell Member, Academic Preparation Certificate for Residents Coordinating Group (Mentor, 2 residents) Peer Evaluation of Teaching (Evaluator for P. Mauldin, P. Edwards and J. Bosso)

D. Other Committee Service

John Bosso Member, Infection Control Committee, 1995- Secretary, Anti-infective Subcommittee, Pharmacy & Therapeutics Committee, 2001- Member, Residency Program Committee, 2003- Shannon Drayton Member, IOP Education Council

Sandra Garner Member, Asthma Committee Leader, Chronic Asthma Management Subcommittee Member, Asthma Education Subcommittee Member, Ad-hoc Neonatal Discharge Prescriptions Committee Member, Neonatal Healthcare Associated Prevention Committee Member, Neonatal Pain Management Committee

Philip Hall Clinical Research Committee, Hollings Cancer Center Protocol Monitoring Committee, Hollings Cancer Center

Marc Lapointe Member, Brain Attack Team

Kristi Lenz Palliative Care Task Force (MUHA committee) Chemotherapy Task Force (Deptment of Pharmacy Services committee)

Sarah Shrader Member; CPOE Build Team for Department of Pharmacy: Oral Diabetes and Antihypertensive medications

Anne Spencer Department of Pharmacy Services, MUH A Member, Clinical Documentation

Wayne Weart Trident United Way – Community Investment Review Team on Health and Healing Select-Health of South Carolina (a SC Medicaid HMO) – Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee member and consultant ProCare Rx Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee member and consultant HealthTrans Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee member, Vice- chair and consultant Physicians Choice a SC Medicaid Medical Home - Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee member and consultant AmeriHealth Mercy – Perform Rx Medicare Part D Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee member

St Matthews Lutheran Church – Stewardship Board Co-chair, Church Council member, Executive Committee member, prayer partner and usher Responded to numerous requests from the MUSC Public Relations Department for interviews and live talk backs segments from the local media including all three local TV networks, The Catalyst and several SC newspapers concerning medication issues

Marlea Wellein Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee: meet monthly to discuss formulary and administrative issues. Direct Thrombin Inhibitors: participated in designing DTI order forms and policies. Residency Committee: attend monthly meeting and participate in residency initiatives to improve program. Andrea Wessell Other Committee Service (including hospital committees) Member, Ambulatory Care Group, Department of Pharmacy Services

9. SERVICE TO STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS

John Bosso Class Advisor: Class of 2009 Faculty Advisor: Phi Delta Chi Professional Fraternity Elinor Chumney Advisor, Class of 2007

Shanon Drayton Faculty Advisor, Class of 2010

Peter Edwards Rho Chi Honor Fraternity Phi Lambda Sigma Leadership Society

Sandra Garner Director, Advanced Clinical Track Academic Advisor

Arnold Karig Advisor for MUSC Chapter, Academy of Student Pharmacists, American Pharmacists Association Marc Lapointe Advisor, Class of 2008 Honorary Member, Kappa Psi Honorary Member, Rho Chi

Kristi Lenz Faculty Advisor, Alpha Iota chapter of the Rho Chi Pharmacy Honor Society Career Day, September 2006 P-2 Recognition Dinner, December 2006 Initiation Banquet, April 2007

Ronald Nickel Faculty Advisor- student chapter of CPFI

Faculty Advisor- student chapter of NCPA( National Community Pharmacist Association)

Kelly Ragucci Faculty Advisor, 15 Doctor of Pharmacy Candidates

Wayne Weart Member of Rho Chi Society Member Phi Lambda Sigma (sponsored students for Annual Leadership Seminar) Moderator and facilitator for Inter-professional Day 2006 and 2007 Student chapter SCSHP Clinical Skills Competition judge (our students won the national competition at ASHP) Student chapter SCSHP BCLS sponsor Clarion Competition Advisory Committee (PLS and MUSC SGA)

Marlea Wellein Phi Lamba Sigma, faculty member Participated in the Interprofessional Competition (as faculty advisor)

10. SERVICE TO PROFESSIONAL ORGANIZATIONS

John Bosso Member, ACCP Parker Medal Selection Committee Chair, AACP-ACCP Partnership Task Force, Section of Teachers of Pharmacy Practice Elinor Chumney Member, ISPOR Member, Managed Care and Pharmacy Benefit Management Special Interest Group Member, RCT – CEA Task Force Reference Group Member, Health Technology Assessment Special Interest Group Member, American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy

2006 MUSC Delegate Reviewer, Journal of Health Policy Reviewer, Journal of the National Medical Association Reviewer, Pharmacoeconomics Reviewer, Value in Health

Peter Edwards Liaison, MUSC College of Pharmacy Alumni Association College Representative, NABP/AACP District III (Plan and coordinated Annual Meeting in Charleston w/ Mike Dunphy, LeeAnn Bundrick, and BoP members, August 6-8, 2006 )

Sandra Garner Abstract Reviewer, ACCP Spring Research and Practice Forum, 2007

Donna Harrison Chair, Nominations Committee, South Carolina Society of Health-System Pharmacists 2006-2007, 2007-2008

Marc Lapointe Mentor, Pharmacy Section of the Society of Critical Care Medicine

Kristi Lenz Surveyor, Oncology Pharmacy Residencies, ASHP Accreditation Services

Jean Nappi Abstract reviewer Annual Meeting, American College of Clinical Pharmacy Reviewer for Research Award Papers, American Society of Health System Pharmacists Member, Awards Committee, American College of Clinical Pharmacy Moderate session, American College of Clinical Pharmacy Annual meeting Surveyor, Internal Medicine Residency, American Society of Health System Pharmacists Member, Committee to rewrite accreditation standards for Pharmacotherapy Residency Standards, American Society of Health System Pharmacists

Ronald Nickel SC-ASCP chapter- serve as Continuing Education advisor MUSC faculty liaison to NCPA

Kelly Ragucci Ambulatory Care Task Force, American College of Clinical Pharmacy Chair, Ambulatory Care PRN, American College of Clinical Pharmacy Primary Care PGY2 Residency Update Design Team, American Society of Health-System Pharmacists

Shara Shrader Member; Ambulatory Care PRN Communications Committee member. American College of Clinical Pharmacy.

Anne Spencer Member, Task Force on Clinical Pharmacist Competencies, American College of Clinical Pharmacy Abstract Reviewer, ACCP Fall meeting Abstract Reviewer, ACCP Spring Meeting Judge, Resident/Fellow Best Poster, ACCP Spring Meeting Member, ACCP Cardiology PRN Update in Significant Articles in Hypertension Writing Group External Reviewer, UCHSC Faculty Member External Reviewer, Texas Tech Faculty Member

Wayne Weart SCPhA – Chair of CE Committee Member of MTMS task Force Board of Directors from the low-country region Delegate APhA Annual Meeting, Atlanta, GA SC Pharmacy Foundation – Board of Trustees ASHP Section of Clinical Specialists – Nominating Committee ACCP Awards Committee SSHP President-elect

Marlea Wellein American Society of Health System Pharmacy Task force to update PGY2 Internal Medicine Residency Goals and Objectives

Andrea Wessell Co-Chair, Ambulatory Care PRN Research and Scholarship Committee, American College of Clinical Pharmacy

11. ADDITIONAL MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS

Donna Harrison Professional Service for College White Coat Ceremony 8/22/06 Speaker about Symbolism of the White Coat Advisor for 11 students in Class of 2010. Professional Service for Department Book Review for Department of Pharmacy and Clinical Sciences Presented February 2007 Hatch, T (2006) Into the Classroom: Developing the scholarship of teaching and learning. San Francisco: Josser-Bass. (107 pages, ISBN: 0-7879-8108-7) Peer Evaluation Performed Elinor Chumney, Fall 2006 Kathy Chessman, Spring 2007 Volunteered as “Back-Up” twice. Was not needed. Participation in Interviews Cardiology Candidates: 2 interviewed Ambulatory Candidates: 2 interviewed Community Candidates: 1 interviewed DI Candidates: 1 interviewed Professional Development Grantsmanship Workshop 2006, attended at MUSC PCCA Boot Camp for Compounding Pharmacy, attended at Houston 2006 (certification of completion attached) SCSHP Annual Meeting, Myrtle Beach, CE 3/5/07 Brown Bag Lunch Meeting--WebCT CPS Demo 11/17/06 SCCP Pharmacy Residents Mentor for Pharmacy Resident--Lizbeth Hansen Resident seminar evaluator November 11, 2006 (Lizbeth Hansen) APP Clinical Seminar Panels: October 20, 2006, Precepting Students March 2007, 2007 General Questions Outside Tours/Presentations Governor’s School Lab Day --2 hour lab for 30 students 6/28/06 Diversified Students Tour, Spring 2007 Anne Spencer Administrative Service- Vice Chair, Department of Pharmacy and Clinical Sciences Faculty Development Compile survey results and prioritize content (with ad hoc comm. input) Populate Faculty Development Library “Book Reports” by faculty, 1 completed, 4 planned “Faculty Profile sessions, 2 completed, 1 planned Seminars, 1 completed, 1 planned

Assist with Faculty Evaluations Wayne Weart External Reviewer for Promotion and Tenure Dr. Maureen Knell, UMKC School of Pharmacy. Dr. Alissa Segal, University of New Mexico, College of Pharmacy Dr Michael Kane, Albany College of Pharmacy