The profession of pharmacy is changing all the time, and through her three years in Āé¶¹Ö±²„ās School of Pharmacy, Erin Wilson ā05, PharmD ā18, had a chance to see it all.
āPeople have this idea that pharmacists just fill your prescription when you go to Fred Meyer,ā she said. āThey do that, and that is a very real and very important part of our profession.ā
But thatās not all.
āThere are pharmacists that are managing patientsā medications in primary care settings,ā she said. āThere are pharmacists rounding in ICUs every day and responding to code blues in hospitals in emergency departments.ā
Through her rotations during her doctor of pharmacy program at Pacific, Wilson had a chance to work in the institutional pharmacy unit of a hospital, learning how medications get where they need to go. She worked a rotation in internal medicine, helping ensure that patientsā home medications were continued when they were admitted to the hospital and supporting the doctors and physician assistants providing primary care. And, she had a round in the intensive care unit, where the intense drama depicted on TV came to live.
āIt was very exciting,ā she said. āYou know on TV, how suddenly thereās a code, and theyāre like, āPush 1 cc of epi!ā or whatever. In reality, thereās usually a pharmacist responding to those codes, drawing up a lot of those meds.ā
Wilson, who completed her underĀé¶¹Ö±²„ degree at Pacific, returned to her alma mater to pursue her doctor of pharmacy degree through the School of Pharmacy in the College of Health Professions.
āI knew the professors here are all about supporting students and optimizing their education,ā she said.
With the programās heavy emphasis on interprofessional education for healthcare professionals and patient-based care, she gained a strong foundation in the breadth of the professionās scope of practice.
āWeāre a lot of places and doing a lot of things, and I think the profession is only going to continue to grow.ā