Creating pharmacists of tomorrow

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A new and unique training program at St. Joseph’s Health Care London is teaching a new generation of pharmacists to meet the growing need for chronic disease care.

As the complexity of chronic diseases evolves - and as rates rise in Canada - St. Joseph’s Health Care London (St. Joseph’s) is helping to create a new generation of pharmacists with expertise in outpatient care for a rapidly growing patient population.

St. Joseph’s recently launched a residency program for new pharmacy graduates focused on outpatient chronic disease management and the critical role of pharmacists in providing wholistic care to patients. The intensive one-year program is one of only a few in Canada providing hands-on training in team-based, outpatient hospital care. With placements at all five St. Joseph’s sites, and in a variety of clinical settings, the pharmacy resident will complete training within the Pain Management Program, Rheumatology Centre, Palliative Care Unit, Rehabilitation Program, Mental Health Care Program, and the organization’s outpatient community pharmacy, with electives available in forensic mental health care and other specialties.  

Particularly unique is what the pharmacy resident will learn about the connection between chronic disease, mental health and rehabilitation, establishing trusting relationships with patients, and the integral role of pharmacists as part of a broad team of health care professionals, explains Denise Kreutzwiser, a pharmacist with St. Joseph’s Pain Management Program who led the development of the new training program.

“No other Canadian pharmacy residency program offers an intensive focus in interdisciplinary chronic pain management or rheumatology, addressing a critical need identified by national bodies of those specialties to better understand and serve those living with chronic pain or rheumatic and musculoskeletal diseases,” says Denise.  

Sumani Vij
Sumani Vij, the inaugural resident of St. Joseph's Health Care London's unique pharmacy residency program, was attracted by the extensive focus on outpatient care of chronic diseases.


With applicants from as far as Qatar and Australia, the successful inaugural pharmacy resident is Sumani Vij, a graduate of University of Waterloo’s School of Pharmacy, who was drawn to the ambulatory care focus at St. Joseph’s.  

“You’re able to create pharmacist-patient relationships, which I really like, but also to collaborate with many allied health professionals – social workers, occupational therapists, nurses, physiotherapists and others,” says Sumani. “You get the best of both worlds.”

While pharmacy rotations during the four years of pharmacy school are compulsory, a residency after graduating and passing the certification exams is voluntary, explains Denise. A residency is additional training that provides pharmacists with proficiency in a particular area. There are only 130 residency spots across Canada for year one pharmacy residents – predominantly in hospital acute care pharmacy.
“There are just a handful of ambulatory or chronic disease-based residency programs in the country,” says Denise.

For Sumani, it was just the opportunity she was seeking. Particularly intriguing, says the driven 25-year-old, “is the focus on chronic pain and mental health, how complex and intermingled they can be, and the pharmacist’s role in supporting patients and making sure they are being treated wholistically – from all angles and by multiple disciplines.”

She also looks forward to an elective in forensic mental health care – a rare learning opportunity in Canada - and a rotation in palliative care because “it’s about looking less at what you can prescribe and more at what you can take away to ensure the patient’s comfort.”

Sumani chose pharmacy as a profession because of its growth and evolution in recent years related to prescribing powers, opportunities to forge relationships with patients, and the diverse workplace options. As she begins her learning journey at St. Joseph’s, she looks forward to gaining experience, confidence and knowledge that will shape her future career, and all the possibilities that loom.  

“Within pharmacy, there’s a whole world to explore and I want to see where I fit best,” says Sumani. “St. Joseph’s residency program is super well-rounded and offers really unique electives. I’m excited by everything it offers. I want to learn and create a better version of myself.”

 

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