My sixth
rotation was an inpatient pediatrics rotation. Overall, it was probably my
busiest rotation in terms of patient care and projects. Specifically
for this rotation, I was given two teams to cover—a pulmonary team and a
general team. It was really daunting at first since it was the most amount of
patients I had to cover out of all my inpatient rotations. Despite that, my
past rotations really gave me the skill to cover both teams fully pretty early
on. I learned how to skim notes for key details, I was familiar with navigating
the electronic medical record, and I knew how to work up a patient since I had
done it during three other rotations (though a little differently each time).
The biggest challenge I faced this
rotation block was how unfamiliar I was with pediatric pharmacy as this was my
first exposure to it. In the beginning, I wasn’t familiar with pediatric dosing
(it’s always best to report in mg/kg dosing) and pediatric disease states
(things like Kawasaki disease or Henoch-Schonlein Purpura). Everything was new
and challenging, but this was also one of my favorite parts of my sixth rotation.
There was so much pay off for the work I was putting in to learn, and it was far
easier to see improvement in my skills throughout the rotation.
Another aspect I loved about this
rotation was the fact that I was exposed to cystic fibrosis. Children with
cystic fibrosis will come in with exacerbations/diminished lung function
and be admitted for IV antibiotics. I learned so much about
vancomycin/aminoglycoside dosing and monitoring, which are vital skills for
pharmacists as these antibiotics can really impact a patient’s kidneys. Cystic
fibrosis patients are also on long lists of medications and this is where a
pharmacist can really carve out a role and be a vital member of the team.
Aside from patient care, I was also
completing multiple projects, which included a journal club, vaccine order set,
audits for a new insulin labeling process, final presentation on IV
bisphosphonates use in pediatrics, and a monograph for a pediatric genetics
medication. This rotation definitely kept me busy!
Next rotation with be my health
system/hospital APPE!
No comments:
Post a Comment