Rotations and Curriculum — Pharmacy Residency at The Jewish Hospital

Facilities

The Jewish Hospital – Mercy Health

The Jewish Hospital (TJH) has provided Greater Cincinnati with exceptional healthcare for over 150 years. As the first Jewish hospital in the United States, TJH was established in 1850 as a result of a cholera epidemic. After being located in Clifton, Ohio for 147 years, the hospital moved all services to the current suburban Kenwood location in 1997.

The Jewish Hospital is a 200+ bed, tertiary care hospital that includes a 26-bed critical care unit, a dedicated inpatient oncology unit, an acute rehabilitation unit, open heart surgery, neurosurgery and an outpatient clinic. A new patient care tower housing orthopedics, neurosurgery, ICU, blood cancer center, outpatient surgery and emergency services opened in 2016. Additional expansions and renovations are currently underway.

The Department of Pharmacy at The Jewish Hospital – Mercy Health operates 24 hours a day with more than 50 employees, including pharmacists, interns, technicians and volunteers. Our pharmacists serve as preceptors for several Ohio pharmacy schools.

 

Rotation Schedule

The PGY 1 Pharmacy Residency Program is a 12-month program with an emphasis in acute care. The pharmacy resident will complete both required and elective learning experiences.

Required rotations –

Monthly learning experiences
Orientation
Internal Medicine (2 months)
Critical Care
Emergency Medicine
Hematology/Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplant
Ambulatory Care
Management
Research

Longitudinal learning experiences
Medication Management Clinic
Staffing
Drug Policy Development
Medication Safety
Research

Electives - 

Monthly learning experiences:
Infectious Disease
Population Health
Specialty Pharmacy
Surgery
Repeat any required rotation

Research and Scholarly Activity

PGY1 pharmacy residents are required to complete a formal, year-long longitudinal research project. Our PGY1 residents are the primary investigators for their research project but are assigned a project preceptor to provide guidance throughout the process. Research projects are presented at local and national conferences throughout the residency year.