Taneja College of Pharmacy Archives - USF Health News /blog/tag/taneja-college-of-pharmacy/ USF Health News Fri, 30 Jun 2023 20:30:38 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 TCOP and Florida Education Fund partner for STEM opportunity /blog/2023/06/27/tcop-and-florida-education-fund-partner-for-stem-opportunity/ Tue, 27 Jun 2023 14:38:39 +0000 /?p=38158                             The USF Health Taneja College of Pharmacy (TCOP) partnered with the Florida Education Fund […]

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The USF Health Taneja College of Pharmacy (TCOP) partnered with the Florida Education Fund for a unique opportunity for masters-level students that aims to address the underrepresentation of African American, Hispanic, and female masters-level student populations in STEM related programs and careers.

Called the McKnight Graduate NANO-STEM Fellowship, this new program is based in TCOP and provides recipients with a $15,000 stipend toward their tuition as they pursue their Master of Science in Pharmaceutical Nanotechnology.

“Over the next seven to 10 years, there is going to be a dire need for STEM graduates in the country,” said Shyam Mohapatra PhD, MBA, TCOP graduate programs associate dean. “The Florida Education Fund has always been at the forefront of advancing educational opportunities for historically underrepresented groups.  This is a perfect match for us since we just achieved a STEM designation.”

Three stipends will be awarded annually to applicants who are:

  • African American, Hispanic and/or female
  • U.S. citizen or permanent resident with proof of Florida residency
  • Accepted into the TCOP Master of Science in Pharmaceutical Technology program
  • A fulltime student with intent to pursue a PhD in a STEM field at a university in Florida

Applicants must submit the following in addition to their online application:

  • Resume or curriculum vitae
  • Official transcripts from each institution attended
  • Three letters of recommendation from individuals who can speak to the applicant’s academic potential
  • Completed Florida residency affidavit

Recipients must agree to the stipulation in the award agreement that requires them to present their research at McKnight conferences, regularly update their program directory information, and complete periodic surveys as requested by the FEF.

In addition to financial relief, McKnight Fellows are also more likely to:

  • Become competitive applicants for doctoral programs and their post-graduate careers
  • Receive additional resources and gain exposure to invaluable professional networks
  • Engage in unique opportunities related to pharmaceutical nanotechnology

All applicants must have all documents submitted to the FEF July 15, 2023.  For more information and instructions on the application process visit https://fefonline.org/gnsf.html



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TCOP to host second career orientation camp /blog/2023/05/25/tcop-to-host-second-career-orientation-camp/ Thu, 25 May 2023 19:44:38 +0000 /?p=38073 The USF Health Taneja College of Pharmacy (TCOP) is calling all middle schoolers, high schoolers, and pharmacy technician students to spend one week of their summer vacation learning […]

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The USF Health Taneja College of Pharmacy (TCOP) is calling all middle schoolers, high schoolers, and pharmacy technician students to spend one week of their summer vacation learning about the pharmacy industry during the second annual Pharmacy Career Orientation Camp, held June 19 to 23.

This four-day immersive experience will expose young students to the many opportunities available in a career in pharmacy.

The camp exposes participants to all aspects of the academic, clinical and research missions of USF Health. Experiences include:

  • Lab tours
  • USF campus pharmacy tours
  • Student, staff and faculty question and answer sessions
  • Hand-on experiences in pharmacies filling prescriptions
  • Interactions with other health college students
  • Understanding bioinformatics
  • Introduction to artificial intelligence in pharmacy

One of the key teaching points of the camp is to address any misconceptions and make sure students understand the role of pharmacists within interprofessional health care teams, according to Angela Hill, PharmD, professor and associate dean of clinical affairs and community outreach leader in TCOP.  Discussions throughout the camp often speak about the “evolution of pharmacy,” as described by Dr. Hill, so students have a better understanding of how the pharmacy field continues to change and welcome in new innovations, including pharmacogenomics, nuclear medicine and nanotechnology.

Key topics include:

  • Working within health care teams
  • Prerequisites to being a pharmacy student
  • Credentialing and making yourself more marketable as a pharmacist
  • Non-clinical roles including research tech
  • Master’s programs

The college has offered pharmacy orientation events since 2012 through the USF TRIO Upward Bound Program, funded by the U.S. Department of Education. Last year, in 2022, was the first time they’ve taken the experiences and lessons learned, expanded and enhanced the hands on experiences and put it into a camp model.

“This would be the best time spent for any student to spend time with us.  This is bigger than us. This is about investing in our future,” Dr. Hill said. “We’re grateful to USF for embracing and supporting us.  We hope the Tampa Bay community can see that we care and we really want to help make sure we produce good citizens who can impact health care.”

The camp is $275 per in-person participant and $150 per virtual participant.  Participants whose parents are USF employees receive a $25 discount to participate.  For more information email Kareen Moreland at kareenmoreland@usf.edu.

Photos from 2022 camp:



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USF Health Taneja College of Pharmacy is building a future Maker Space/Creativity Lounge /blog/2022/12/20/usf-health-taneja-college-of-pharmacy-is-building-a-future-maker-space-creativity-lounge/ Tue, 20 Dec 2022 20:33:29 +0000 /?p=37559 The Taneja College of Pharmacy has enhanced its foundational, didactic, and experiential curriculum to accommodate the diversity of students entering pharmacy school, many with diverse backgrounds in study, […]

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The Taneja College of Pharmacy has enhanced its foundational, didactic, and experiential curriculum to accommodate the diversity of students entering pharmacy school, many with diverse backgrounds in study, work, and life experiences. The curriculum includes components that allow students to pursue their passions, become workforce-ready, and pursue nontraditional pharmacy career paths.

As the USF Health Taneja College of Pharmacy’s (TCOP) new 30,000-square-foot home in downtown Tampa continues to progress, plans include a Maker Space/Creativity Lounge, a space that will connect students, faculty, and staff with leaders and innovators to promote creativity as part of professional development.

“The key to this vision is the ITEHC Academy (Innovation, Technology, and Entrepreneurship in Healthcare). What originally started as a student-developed organization has grown to become the foundation for initiatives focused on advancing our student’s creativity, innovative and disruptive mindsets. It is now the pinnacle of the pillars and strategic plan of the USF Health Taneja College of Pharmacy,” said Kevin M. Olson, MBA, PharmD, CPh, assistant professor at the USF Health Taneja College of Pharmacy and director of the ITEHC Academy.


To help elevate and advance pharmaceutical education further, the new space will include virtual and augmented reality, a multitaction video wall, CAD drawing software, 3D printing, and holographic technology.

The space will allow various student groups, such as ITEHC, to develop innovative ideas and prototypes for health-related devices.

“Envision a space where students, faculty, staff, and community partners can come together and collaborate, a space where they can discover new ways of creating value that will advance pharmacy practice, differentiate pharmacist career opportunities, and reshape the future of pharmacy and health care,” Dr. Olson said.

Story and video by Ryan Rossy, USF Health Communications and Marketing

 

Rendering of the Student Commons outside the Creativity Lounge.

Rendering of the Creativity Lounge.



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Taneja College of Pharmacy celebrates the class of 2026 in White Coat Ceremony /blog/2022/09/20/taneja-college-of-pharmacy-celebrates-the-class-of-2026-in-white-coat-ceremony/ Tue, 20 Sep 2022 16:30:28 +0000 /?p=37206 As the USF Health Taneja College of Pharmacy celebrates its 10th anniversary, its latest group of pharmacy students were welcomed into training on Friday, Sept. 16. The annual […]

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As the USF Health Taneja College of Pharmacy celebrates its 10th anniversary, its latest group of pharmacy students were welcomed into training on Friday, Sept. 16.

The annual White Coat Ceremony—during which faculty present the students with the coats and pins they will wear for the next four years— was held at USF’s Marshall Student Center for the 69 members of the class of 2026.

Kevin Sneed, PharmD, the dean of the Taneja College of Pharmacy and USF Health Senior Associate Vice President, welcomed the students and their families.

“The Taneja College of Pharmacy is not only forging a path to innovative discoveries and products, but with the full intention of transforming lives for the better,” Dr. Sneed said.

Kevin Sneed, PharmD, USF Health senior associate Vice President and Dean of the Taneja College of Pharmacy, gives the opening remarks.

Dr. Sneed later announced that the college was renaming its Entrepreneurial Academy, a two-year-old program that provides pharmacy students with advanced education and training in innovation and business development. It will now be called the ITEHC (Innovation, Technology, and Entrepreneurship in Health Care) Academy.

“Let us not be limited in our courage to be bold, innovative and transformative,” he said.

As part of the ceremony, Dr. Sneed was honored with the college’s first chain of office. The chain will traditionally be worn by the college’s leader during ceremonial events and will be engraved with the names of Dr. Sneed and future deans.

Angela Hill, PharmD, smiled after the Taneja College of Pharmacy class of 2026 students finish their “Oath of Professionalism” during the White Coat Ceremony.

David Medvedeff, PharmD, gave the keynote address during the Taneja College of Pharmacy class of 2026 White Coat Ceremony 

The ceremony also featured a keynote address by David Medvedeff, PharmD, CEO and co-founder of Aspen RxHealth. Dr. Medvedeff emphasized the rewards of difficult careers.

“If the work we’re doing was easy, everyone would do it,” Dr. Medvedeff said. “Being a pharmacist, from my perspective, is hard, but it doesn’t mean it’s not fun or rewarding. It’s just really hard because it matters.”

A procession of Taneja College of Pharmacy students heads to their seats during the class of 2026 White Coat Ceremony.

The Taneja College of Pharmacy’s class of 2026 is almost three-quarters women and ethnically diverse, with 60 percent identifying as Hispanic, African American or Asian. The class is also strong academically—44.5 percent of the students have completed a bachelor’s or master’s degree.

More than 90 percent of the students hail from Florida, but there are also students from Illinois, New York, South Carolina and Puerto Rico.

Dean of the Taneja College of Pharmacy and USF Health Senior Associate Vice Presiden. Kevin Sneed, PharmD,  greets Executive Vice President of USF Health and Dean of USF Health Morsani College of Medicine, Charles Lockwood, MD, during the annual White Coat Ceremony for USF Health’s Taneja College of Pharmacy, held at the Marshall Student Center. The ceremony, during which pharmacy students receive their distinctive white coats, marks the beginning of their four years of training.

 

Photos, videos and story by: Allison Long/USF Health



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Nanobiotechnology conference brings together multiple disciplines to impact future pandemics /blog/2022/04/29/nanobiotechnology-conference-brings-together-multiple-disciplines-to-impact-future-pandemics/ Fri, 29 Apr 2022 14:26:34 +0000 /?p=36423 Nanotechnology and biotechnology experts from around the globe gathered in-person and virtually at this year’s Global Nanobiotechnology Conference (GNC), hosted April 22 to 24 by USF’s NANO and […]

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Nanotechnology and biotechnology experts from around the globe gathered in-person and virtually at this year’s Global Nanobiotechnology Conference (GNC), hosted April 22 to 24 by USF’s NANO and Engineering Biology student organizations and the USF Health Taneja College of Pharmacy.

Nearly 170 attendees representing researchers from across the United States, as well as a global reach to India, Turkey, Azerbaijan and Colombia, registered for this conference’s second annual event, all benefiting from the opportunity to network and foster scientific and research collaborations. Poster presentations and oral presentations at the event highlighted current work being done in the fields of nano-technology and biotechnology.

USF President Rhea Law urged attendees to continue their life-saving work.

“I’m proud that the University of South Florida is hosting such a critically important event –given the global devastation and calamity that COVID-19 has caused in the last two years,” said USF President Rhea Law in her remarks to conference attendees. “But this has made the work you do all the more vital. There is a dire need to continue innovating nano-biotech-based approaches to manage the pandemic. A global crisis like this one requires intensive collaboration and interdisciplinary research, uniting the most creative minds in tackling it. And that is precisely what this conference helps to accomplish–bringing together scientists from medicine to physics, material science, molecular biology, and biomedical engineering to find new solutions to COVID and other threats to humankind.”

Charles Lockwood, MD, MHCM, senior vice president for USF Health and dean of the Morsani College of Medicine, also share a message of support.

“The University of South Florida takes great pride in its status as a global research university and this conference offers a great opportunity to continue building a worldwide network of faculty, scientists and industry partners dedicated to innovating nano-biotech research,” Dr. Lockwood said. “This weekend you will hear from some of the world’s top experts discussing advancements in nanotechnology, and the implication for improving health care across the globe.”

This year’s conference was chaired by Shyam Mohapatra, PhD, MBA, professor and associate dean of the USF Health Taneja College of Pharmacy. The annual event is motivated by the need for developing nanobiotechnologies for current COVID-19 pandemic and such pandemics in the future.

The interdisciplinary nature of nanobiotechnology brings together scientists from medicine, physics, material science, molecular biology, and biomedical engineering, among other disciplines, to find solutions for challenging problems that humankind is facing with transdisciplinary approaches. The role of nanotechnology has been clearly illustrated in the novel methods of diagnosis, vaccines, and treatments, which have been developed against COVID-19.



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USF Health Taneja College of Pharmacy on target for moving to downtown Tampa /blog/2021/08/12/usf-health-taneja-college-of-pharmacy-on-target-for-moving-to-downtown-tampa/ Thu, 12 Aug 2021 14:14:06 +0000 /?p=34597 The pharmacy program will build out shelled space in the new USF Health Downtown building over the next year and move in early 2023. TAMPA, Fla (Aug. 12, […]

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The pharmacy program will build out shelled space in the new USF Health Downtown building over the next year and move in early 2023.

TAMPA, Fla (Aug. 12, 2021) – The USF Health Taneja College of Pharmacy is moving forward with its plans to build out space and move into the USF Health Downtown building, an opportunity for the innovative pharmacy program to expand its physical space, technology and creative learning pedagogies.

The new 30,000-square-foot home for the pharmacy school will fill about one and a half floors of the building and will enhance the pharmacy program in several ways, including:

  • Clinical learning center: A dedicated space that will provide an innovative environment to learn advanced compounding techniques and hone clinical skills for students. This space will also be a resource for pharmacist clinicians, and others, to advance their health care knowledge through continuing education programs.
  • Expansion of interprofessional education: As health care becomes even more team based moving into the future, the new home will foster even greater opportunities for interprofessional training, a core component of the educational mission for all USF Health programs, including MD, nursing, public health, physical therapy and physician assistant programs. The convergence of multiple disciplines learning together will create one of the most robust interprofessional learning centers in the country.
  • Collaborative ‘maker’ space: A unique space offers a creative environment for student groups, such as ITEHC (Innovation, Technology, and Entrepreneurship in Healthcare), to cultivate new ideas and discoveries resulting in the ability to generate prototypes of new health-related devices.
  • Community outreach: Plans are in place to offer space as a resource for youth in surrounding areas to experience health professions through direct engagement and gamification. This will build upon long-standing successful community outreach programs already taking place with the Taneja College of Pharmacy.

“The Taneja College of Pharmacy continues to grow, and a move to the state-of-the-art USF Health Downtown Facility will provide incredible opportunities to enhance its innovative educational and research programs,” said Charles Lockwood, MD, senior vice president for USF Health and dean of the Morsani College of Medicine. “By building out new spaces in the facility, the TCOP will take the next step in establishing itself as a state and national leader in personalized medicine, pharmaceutical compounding, and advanced pharmacy education.”

The new space is being designed by architecture, engineering and design firm Gresham Smith. The design will integrate with the building’s existing mechanical, electrical and life safety systems, and will extend many of the classroom technologies and innovative educational initiatives already in place for the Morsani College of Medicine.

Already a leader for attracting Florida’s best pharmacy students, USF’s pharmacy school will likely feel further impact in both student and faculty recruitment efforts due to the appeal of its new location in the burgeoning Water Street Tampa district of downtown Tampa.

“We’ve had great success building our revolutionary curriculum and are already a much sought-after, forward-thinking pharmacy program,” said Kevin B. Sneed, PharmD, dean of the Taneja College of Pharmacy and senior associate vice president for USF Health. “This new home will further elevate our program in stature, for providing an advanced pharmacy education and for its new location, where students can live, work, play and stay.”

The USF Health Downtown building opened in Water Street Tampa in January 2020, welcoming the MD program for the USF Health Morsani College of Medicine, and the Heart Institute. Across the years from groundbreaking to opening the new USF Health Downtown building, the USF Health Morsani College of Medicine experienced drastic upticks in recruitment efforts and caliber of students applying to the MD program.

At the August 2019 announcement that USF had received a $10 million gift from the Taneja Family Foundation for the USF Health College of Pharmacy.

The potential for the College of Pharmacy to move into USF Health Downtown began in August 2019, when the College announced a generous $10 million gift from Taneja Family Foundation, the largest philanthropic gift to a pharmacy school in the state of Florida.

“The generosity of the Taneja Family Foundation set into motion these plans for setting up home in downtown Tampa,” Dr. Sneed said. “And the ripple effect of that gift will be felt for years to come as we continuously improve our program and attract the best and brightest pharmacy faculty and students.”

The USF Health Taneja College of Pharmacy was established by the Florida Board of Governors in 2009 and welcomed its charter class in August 2011. From the start, the pharmacy program set out to build an innovative program that would be a pacesetter in both pharmacy curriculum and clinical experience. Today, the College of Pharmacy welcomes 100 new students each year for its PharmD program, and has expanded its offerings to include master’s degrees suited for students interested in pursuing a professional degree program, an advanced degree, a degree focused on research, or a degree for those interested in working in the pharmaceutical industry.

Renderings of the new space were provided by Gresham Smith:

 

 



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USF Health Taneja College of Pharmacy Celebrates 10 Years /blog/2021/07/21/usf-health-taneja-college-of-pharmacy-celebrates-10-years/ Wed, 21 Jul 2021 14:42:06 +0000 /?p=34272   A decade ago, the USF Health Taneja College of Pharmacy (TCOP) admitted its charter class of PharmD students. With its innovative curriculum, research and educational advances, dynamic […]

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A decade ago, the USF Health Taneja College of Pharmacy (TCOP) admitted its charter class of PharmD students. With its innovative curriculum, research and educational advances, dynamic leadership, and commitment to excellence and growth, the college climbed the U.S. News & World Report rankings to become #68 Best Pharmacy School in 2020. “It doesn’t feel like ten years,” Kevin B. Sneed, PharmD, senior associate vice president of USF Health and founding dean of the USF Health Taneja College of Pharmacy, said. “When you see all of the hard work that has gone into building something from scratch and the enormous amount that we’ve accomplished in a 10 year period, it just means so much and is so rewarding.”

Take a look back at some of the college’s notable achievements and what it has in store for the next 10 years.

 

The USF Health Taneja College of Pharmacy (TCOP) was established in 2007. From the start, founding Dean Kevin B. Sneed, PharmD, set out to build an innovative program that would be a pacesetter in both pharmacy curriculum and clinical experience. With a focus on the future of healthcare and the interprofessional prowess of USF Health, TCOP was established by the Florida Board of Governors in 2009 and became Florida’s first public, comprehensive college of pharmacy in a metropolitan area.

 

TCOP’s first pharmacy student, Mark LaBossiere, PharmD, now a mental health clinical pharmacist at Mountain Home VA, was one of 38 students who applied during the early action application phase. As the interviews were scored and candidates were ranked, five more students were chosen as the first to be accepted: Semyon Aminov, Phuong Le, Aakash Patel, Bradley Tillander, and Minal Shah. “We are charting new territory in pharmacy education,” Dr. Sneed said. “Our student pharmacists will be trained to participate as effective and integral members of an inter-professional healthcare team. Students are being handpicked for qualities that go beyond test scores and grades.”

Inducted in 2011, the charter class included 53 PharmD students (68% female, 32% male, and 53% Caucasian, 46% minority and 1 undisclosed ethnicity). “Our student body has a diverse variety of talents and backgrounds that will allow us to grow in ways never imagined,” said LaBossiere during the white coat ceremony’s closing remarks. “As the Class of 2015, we’ll travel uncharted territory, set the bar for those who follow and continue to make history – go Bulls!”

Dr. Sneed presented four people with the Dean’s Awards, the College’s highest honor, for being instrumental in helping create TCOP – Judy Genshaft, PhD, USF System President (2000-2019); Stephen Klasko, MD, MBA, CEO of USF Health and dean of the Morsani College of Medicine (2004-2013); Patricia Haynie, former associate vice president from strategic planning and policy; and Ralph Wilcox, PhD, USF Provost.

Today, the Taneja College of Pharmacy welcomes 100 new students each year for its PharmD program.

 

Graduate Programs was founded in 2013 with the mission to create graduate level education programs in pharmacy while producing global pharmacy leaders, one scholar at a time. Eight years later, Graduate Programs has grown to offer the Master of Science in Pharmaceutical Nanotechnology degree, 5 different graduate certificate programs, PharmD/M.S. concurrent degree program, and a wide range of elective course options. The vision is to develop cutting-edge research training while preparing students with the foundational knowledge and expertise in the area of pharmaceutical nanotechnology.

 

TCOP earned its first full accreditation in 2015 from the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), marking a huge milestone for the young school and validating the innovative education experience offered to USF Health pharmacy students. In addition, the ACPE recognized the college’s interprofessional endeavors and sent a commendation to the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy as an example of noteworthy practice. As part of the accreditation process, the college was measured across 30 standards for providing a strong program, including planning and evaluation, administration and governance, curriculum, student support, faculty and staff, and facilities and resources. “This is the best news and our entire team of faculty, staff and students is thrilled,” said Dr. Sneed. “Such resounding approval confirms what we’ve all known about the program we are building and is the culmination of a lot of hard work.”

 

In 2015, Pharmacy Plus opened for business on the first floor of the USF Health Morsani Center for Advanced Healthcare. USF Health’s “Pharmacy of the Future” is blazing a trail, making the traditional behind-the-counter role of the pharmacist obsolete in the new era of the digital health revolution. At Pharmacy Plus, the pharmacists do more than provide pills, they are a valued health partner for improving a patient’s life. It’s a personalized experience, bringing patients, their pharmacist and their healthcare team, together to collaborate and communicate. Physicians seeing patients inside the Morsani Center can electronically send prescriptions to Pharmacy Plus so that, in most cases, the medication can be ready for pickup before the patient leaves the building. In addition, medication can be delivered anywhere on the USF Tampa campus. USF Health Pharmacy Plus earned Community Pharmacy accreditation through the Center for Pharmacy Practice Accreditation (CPPA®)  in 2018.

 

TCOP was officially accepted as a chapter of the international Rho Chi Honor Society in 2016, and 43 of the college’s students and faculty were inducted as the charter members. The Epsilon Kappa Chapter is the 119th chapter for the national honor society. Since its inception in 1922, the Rho Chi Society has inducted more than 100,000 members into its fellowship. The society’s name is from the Greek letters Rho and Chi that, when juxtaposed a certain way, they form the prescription sign (Rx). Bradley Boucher, PharmD, FCCP, FCCM, Rho Chi Society National President (2016-2018), officiated the event and shared the Society’s mission and vision and what is expected of its chapters and members, saying, “the Rho Chi Honor Society encourages and recognizes excellence in intellectual achievement and fosters scholarship among its members, encourages high standards of conduct and character and advocates critical inquiry in all aspects of pharmacy, seeks to achieve universal recognition of its members as lifelong intellectual leaders in pharmacy.”

 

In 2019, the University of South Florida received a $10 million gift from Taneja Family Foundation to name the USF Health Taneja College of Pharmacy. The donation, made through the USF Foundation, is the largest philanthropic gift to a pharmacy school in the state of Florida. As result of the gift, TCOP will move to Water Street Tampa, inside the new USF Health Morsani College of Medicine and Heart Institute facility in downtown Tampa. “From the very beginning, we set out to build a college built for the future of healthcare, and not simply exist in the past,” said Dr. Sneed. “With the generosity of Mr. Taneja, we will now have the opportunity to build a new home that allows us to truly build the pharmacist clinician of the future.”

“Jugal and Manju Taneja share a passion for education, for giving back to their community, and for transforming the health care system for future generations,” said USF President Steve Currall, PhD. “This gift will do so much for the trajectory of USF’s success — advancing innovation at our College of Pharmacy and elevating the academic stature of the entire university.”

 

TCOP is already full speed ahead into its next ten years, building the foundation for continued success. The college is expanding its pharmacogenomics efforts by launching a new partnership with Tampa General Hospital and its pharmacy team that will allow clinicians to tailor medications based on a patient’s genetic makeup. Plans include developing clinical decision support tools in the electronic health record (EHR) to support clinicians in interpreting results and guide treatment options in the presence of pharmacogenetic data. The Botanical Medical Research and Education Consortium (BMREC) is a new research effort that will explore potential therapeutic benefits in medicinal botanicals. This initiative aims to contribute to the body of science already known about medicinal plants and to impact patient care with treatments and potential cures. TCOP is also developing a unique certificate program in pharmaceutical compounding and will soon have a brand-new, non-sterile compounding lab inside USF Health Downtown. In collaboration with the USF Muma College of Business, the TCOP Entrepreneurial Academy, is a new program that aims to help its pharmacy students succeed in the health care industry and pharmacy sector. The intra- and inter-collegiate interdisciplinary program aims to provide pharmacy students with innovative, intrapreneurial and entrepreneurial knowledge, tools, and skills necessary for advanced practice training and health care careers. A new resource within the college, the Industry Advisory Council (TCOP-IAC), will provide students networking and interprofessional opportunities with professionals in the pharmaceutical industry, experience that could help shape the careers of these future pharmacists. This new grass-roots type effort, called the Pharmacy Industry Network (PIN), allows students to spend time with industry experts to gain valuable insight into that lane of the pharmacy profession.

“We never walked in looking in the rearview mirror. We’ve always been looking forward and we continue to do that today,” Dr. Sneed said. “Our vision for the next ten years is to continue to promulgate the transformation of health care.”



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Taneja College of Pharmacy adds new resource for student success /blog/2021/05/11/taneja-college-of-pharmacy-adds-new-resource-for-student-success/ Tue, 11 May 2021 14:34:38 +0000 /?p=34093 A new resource within the Taneja College of Pharmacy – Industry Advisory Council(TCOP-IAC) will provide students networking and interprofessional opportunities with professionals in the pharmaceutical industry, experience that […]

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A new resource within the Taneja College of Pharmacy – Industry Advisory Council(TCOP-IAC) will provide students networking and interprofessional opportunities with professionals in the pharmaceutical industry, experience that could help shape the careers of these future pharmacists.

This new grass-roots type effort, called the Pharmacy Industry Network, or PIN, allows students to spend time with industry experts to gain valuable insight into that lane of the pharmacy profession.

PIN, who will meet bi-monthly, held its first meeting on April 16 and had an excellent turnout. Attendees included first- through fourth-year pharmacy students, faculty, staff, alumni, and industry partners. Discussion items included research, collaboration, and education collaboration. The goal of the first meeting was to gain the attendees’ input to create future goals for PIN to strive for, to determine the needs of the attendees, what they can contribute to the network, and what they would like to see the network do in future meetings.

Overall, attendees loved the idea of having the opportunity to network with one another within the network, happy to have the interaction with the industry, and would like to see guest speakers during these meetings according to Shyam Mohapatra, PhD, TCOP-IAC chair, and TCOP associate dean and professor.  Attendees were sent a brief survey following the meeting as an opportunity to share additional feedback and to gauge how PIN will move forward.

The PIN aims to provide these opportunities to TCOP students early in their academic journey to help guide them toward specific career paths in the industry and to help them better plan internships and other learning opportunities, Dr. Mohapatra said.

“Having hands-on experience and strong networking skills are important in the pharmacy industry,” he said. “The PIN allows students the opportunity to gain that necessary experience earlier in their academic careers, making them stronger candidates for jobs when they are ready to enter the workforce.”

Some of the industry partners working with the TCOP-IAC and University of South Florida include BioNTech, Pfizer, Bristol Myers Squibb.

The TCOP-IAC was established in 2020 to fulfill the college’s mission of revolutionizing health.  The IAC is comprised of partners with pharmacy, nanotechnology, biotechnology and life science industries, and other non-profit and for-profit research institutions.  The mission of the council is to:

  • Strengthen industry-academia partnerships within Florida.
  • Establish joint career, research, and educational collaborations and pipelines.
  • Foster and promote entrepreneurial activities.
  • Provide a network of industry contacts for stakeholders, faculty, and students.
  • Ensure education programs are effective and relevant for meeting the needs of industry affiliates and the community.

The next meeting of the PIN will be sometime in June.



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USF Health Taneja College of Pharmacy Pharmaceutical Compounding Program /blog/2021/03/31/usf-health-taneja-college-of-pharmacy-pharmaceutical-compounding-program/ Wed, 31 Mar 2021 19:07:29 +0000 /?p=33795   In the pursuit and attainment of excellence, the USF Health Taneja College of Pharmacy (TCOP) is guided by the mission to revolutionize health as it becomes the […]

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In the pursuit and attainment of excellence, the USF Health Taneja College of Pharmacy (TCOP) is guided by the mission to revolutionize health as it becomes the pacesetter for pharmacy education in an ever-changing healthcare field. Personalized medicine is a key part of the future of healthcare, and that’s where pharmaceutical compounding plays a role.

USF TCOP has a non-sterile compounding lab that provides the setting for the education and training to current and future pharmacists and pharmacy technicians through an in-depth, hands-on continuing education (CE) program. “We are the only college in Florida and one of the few across the Nation that provides a CE program in compounding,” Vijaykumar Sutariya, MPharm, PhD, RPh, associate professor in the Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences at USF TCOP, said. “The open lab has all the equipment required, from the laminar flow hood for sterile preparations, mortars and pestles, balances, mixers, ultraviolet (UV) spectroscopy, dissolution testers, disintegration testers and density testers.”

Trainees also benefit from regular collaboration with the USF Clinical Investigational Research Pharmacy (CIRP) and their sterile clean room located on the sixth floor of the Morsani Center for Advanced Healthcare. The primary function of CIRP is to conduct double blinded studies and appropriate procurement, storage, documentation, control, sterile preparation, distribution and disposal of investigational products for clinical trial patients.

Currently, the non-sterile lab is located on the University of South Florida’s Tampa Campus, but it will soon be moving downtown to Water Street Tampa and into the new USF Health Morsani College of Medicine, Taneja College of Pharmacy and Heart Institute. The new space will provide room for a modern, state-of-the-art pharmaceutical compounding lab with mobile workstations.

The U.S. Pharmacopeia Convention (USP) formally defines compounding as, “the preparation, mixing, assembling, altering, packaging, and labeling of a drug, drug-delivery device, or device in accordance with a licensed practitioner’s prescription, medication order, or initiative based on the practitioner/patient/pharmacist/compounder relationship in the course of professional practice.”

Traditionally, patients are prescribed manufactured or mass-produced drug products approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in order to treat their illnesses. According to the American Pharmacists Association (APhA), pharmaceutical compounding comes in when patients have special needs that prevents them from being able to take medications already on the commercial market. A few examples of customized medications include changing the strength or dosage; adding flavor to make the drug more appealing to a child or pet; reformulating the drug to exclude an unwanted, nonessential ingredient, such as lactose, gluten, or a dye to which a patient is allergic; changing the form of the drug, such as from oral to suppository for a patient who has difficulty swallowing; and providing access to a drug that was discontinued from the commercial market. The practice of compounding is regulated by state boards of pharmacy and does not include making copies of commercially available drug products, as this is not allowed by law. There are currently 7,500 pharmacies in the United States that specialize in compounding services. USF Health Pharmacy Plus on the first floor of the Morsani Center offers compounding services for medications that can be customized in a non-sterile environment such as topical pain creams for a USF athlete or an Orthopedic and Sports Medicine patient.

In addition to a brand-new lab, USF TCOP is developing a unique certificate program in pharmaceutical compounding. “The certificate program will be great for undergraduate students who are interested in going into pharmacy, so they can see what compounding is before they make the decision to come to the pharmacy program,” Dr. Sutariya said. USF TCOP PharmD students can also pursue the certificate for more exposure into the practice of compounding beyond the three courses already built into the PharmD program. “If a student would like to open their own compounding pharmacy or work for one, the USF Health Taneja College of Pharmacy is the best place to start their career.”



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Fighting Racial Disparities In Health Through Student Education /blog/2021/03/04/fighting-racial-disparities-in-health-through-student-education/ Thu, 04 Mar 2021 21:45:52 +0000 /?p=33519 In December 2020, Susan Moore, MD, an Indiana physician, died of COVID-19 after alleging she experienced racial discrimination while undergoing treatment at a hospital operated by Indiana University […]

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USF Health students, staff and faculty during a White Coats 4 Black Lives demonstration outside of the USF Health Morsani Center, in June 2020.

In December 2020, Susan Moore, MD, an Indiana physician, died of COVID-19 after alleging she experienced racial discrimination while undergoing treatment at a hospital operated by Indiana University Health System. “Moore’s story of her pain being dismissed reinforces what studies have repeatedly shown: Even taking wealth, education and insurance status into account, Black patients receive worse medical care and face worse outcomes,” a Washington Post article on Dr. Moore’s death said.

Just one month before Dr. Moore’s death, the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) shared an article that touched on a 2016 study published in the Proceedings of the National Academies of Science which included a survey that revealed that 40% of first- and second-year medical students endorsed the belief that “Black people’s skin is thicker than white people’s.” The study also showed that the trainees who believed this myth were less likely to treat Black people’s pain appropriately.

This article brought to light the continued need for institutions to address racial bias in healthcare starting with health education. USF Health is doing its part by building curriculums that teach the next generation of health care providers about social determinants of health and how to provide value-based and patient-centered care, and recruiting and retaining the diverse educators to teach it.

“Your goal as the practitioner is to truly understand who the patient is and all of the different aspects of the patient which may have some impact on their medical care,” Deborah DeWaay, MD, FACP, associate dean of undergraduate medical education for USF Health Morsani College of Medicine (MCOM), said. “It helps the provider battle unconscious bias because when they individuate patients in their mind, they’re less likely to give biased care.”

In 2016, MCOM started focusing on incorporating course objectives that examine prejudice, assumptions and privilege, such as Safe Zone training and poverty simulation activities. In 2019, Shirley Smith, MA, director of student diversity and enrichment for MCOM, became the College’s integration director for cultural competency. Using the AAMC’s objectives for cultural competency, Smith spent hundreds of hours reviewing the entire MCOM curriculum, and will continue to do so on an annual basis, highlighting places where the objectives were not being met to the highest level. These findings were then presented to the curriculum committee who make the final decision about changes to curriculum and if approved, provide recommendations for moving forward. In addition, Smith provided feedback to faculty about where there may be bias within the didactics. “It’s been really refreshing to have faculty embrace this and leadership like Dr. Lockwood, support this,” Smith said. Students also have the ability to provide real-time feedback to Smith and her team via an anonymous survey. “What we’re really trying to do is not have any judgement attached to the feedback,” Dr. DeWaay said. “We’re trying to create a method for our faculty who are teaching, to deal with their unconscious bias in a safe environment.”

USF College of Public Health Dean Donna Petersen, participating in the 2019 poverty simulation along with other USF Health deans, faculty, staff and students. Pre-Covid Photo.

MCOM is also in the process of partnering with Wake Forest University in North Carolina to create curriculum that can be used at both universities in order to maximize resources and reach more people. This material will become a curricular thread integrated across all four years of medical school which USF MCOM calls Humanism in Action. Smith quoted Bryan Bognar, MD, MPH, vice dean of MCOM educational affairs, when she explained that the important part of this effort is to make sure that they’re “baking things in” and that the curriculum is “not an à la cart menu.” The curriculum teaches students the communication skills necessary to elicit the values of their patients and then integrate those values into the patient’s medical plan. “It’s physically impossible in four years to teach students every single nuance about all the ways a human being or population can be different,” Dr. DeWaay said. “It’s far more important to teach the attitude that they need, the skills to illicit the information from the patient and the skills to keep up on the literature, so that they have the tools that they need moving forward, to take care of any patient that’s in front of them.” According to Smith, the objective is to teach students not to assume anything about their patient, not to project their own values onto the patient and not to deviate from what is fact or what is in the evidence. Janet Roman, DNP, APRN, ACNP-BC, director of the Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) program in the USF Health College of Nursing (CON), added that it’s not just about what question is asked, but about how it is asked. The way a question is worded can be loaded with an assumption and be offensive to the patient. “If you ask me, “Do I have access to healthy food?” now you’re assuming that I don’t,” Dr. Roman said. “If you ask me, “Where do I get my groceries?” then that gives you the answer.”

A taskforce is also being formed to include faculty and students who will help build and implement this new Humanism in Action curriculum and be a resource to faculty for recommendations or feedback on revamping lectures, small groups and activities. One component of change cultivated by the COVID-19 pandemic is the acceptance of virtual guest speakers and virtual learning by students and educators. This will allow for a more diverse representation of speakers to be a part of the courses as well as private, small group activities that can foster more vulnerable discussions. “These beliefs have to be socially unwoven through intentional, meaningful conversations and interactions with depth and the goal is to give students that opportunity,” Smith said. “I’m just planting seeds. I may never see the tree, but I must believe that the possibility is there.”

In January 2020, MCOM earned recognition from the Alpha Omega Alpha (AOA) Honor Medical Society for their dedication to diversity and understanding in various patient populations. The medical school was one of two medical schools in Florida to receive an Award for Excellence in Inclusion, Diversity and Equity in Medical Education and Patient Care. The award recognizes medical schools, and their associated AOA chapters, that demonstrate exemplary leadership, innovation, and engagement in fostering an inclusive culture that transforms the ideas of inclusion, diversity and equity into successful programs that support student, staff and faculty diversity in service to the community.

After the murder of George Floyd in May 2020, students pleaded for a call to action for faster implementation of changes to the curriculum. “The morbidity and mortality that social determinants of health, systemic racism, and health care disparities have cost people living in this country, far surpasses the toll COVID will take, and yet we’re not tackling it with the same resources,” Dr. DeWaay said. “With COVID hitting, it shows us on a local, regional and national level, what we’re capable of doing when we’re really worried about something.” Fueled by the same passion as the students who have championed these efforts from the very beginning, Smith and Dr. DeWaay returned to the curriculum committee and presented a 15-point, call to action. The committee mandated the plan in June 2020.

Dr. Deborah DeWaay (center), associate dean of undergraduate medical education for USF Health Morsani College of Medicine, with medical students. Pre-Covid Photo.

According to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), there is increasing evidence that Black, Indigenous and Latinx communities are suffering disproportionately from COVID-19. This is the kind of information that can spark a myth about minorities if the root of the cause is misunderstood. Black Americans are infected with COVID-19 at nearly three times the rate of white Americans and are twice as likely to die from the virus, according to a report from the National Urban League based on data from Johns Hopkins University. This is not because of any biological differences between the two groups, but instead, social determinants of health and systemic racism. This is evident in the report which shows that Blacks are more likely to have preexisting conditions that predispose them to COVID-19 infection, less likely to have health insurance, and more likely to work in jobs that do not accommodate remote work. “Your zip code may be the biggest determinate of your health outcome more than anything else,” Kevin Sneed, PharmD, dean of the USF Health Taneja College of Pharmacy (TCOP), said.

Understanding these social determinants of health is instrumental in dispelling myths and providing patient-centered care and is another key component of USF Health education. Social determinants of health are conditions in the places where people live, learn, work and play that affects a wide range of health and quality-of life-risks and outcomes. Factors can include a person’s education, financial literacy, discrimination, and access to healthy food and safe places to exercise. Students in the USF Health College of Nursing learn about disease processes such as heart failure, hypertension and diabetes, and at the same time, “we want to point out to students which populations are disproportionately affected and then give them that background on why, so that we can help close that health disparity gap,” Dr. Roman said.

According to Dr. Sneed, one of the most meaningful courses offered at the Taneja College of Pharmacy, one that has been a requirement for first-years ever since the inaugural class of 2011, is the introduction to public health course. The course was developed by the USF Health College of Public Health (COPH), continues to have input from their faculty, and mainly focuses on social determinants of health. “You spotlight that in a course and then when you give the demographics of what that means for these various communities, it really does help broaden the expanse of how people view communities of color and why we do things like Bridge Clinic and Tampa Bay Street Medicine,” Dr. Sneed said. “We’re going to have to push to a different level of comfort, maybe even discomfort for many people in order for it to really take hold.”

A pharmacist has a unique place in the community. “Not everybody has a physician or has health insurance, but anybody can go to CVS and say, “my child has a fever,” Tricia Penniecook, MD, MPH, vice dean for education and faculty affairs for COPH, said. The patient benefits if the pharmacist has a public health world view and can help make decisions that are best for the patient’s situation.

USF College of Pharmacy Dean Kevin Sneed, PharmD, and Tricia Penniecook, MD, MPH, vice dean for education, participating in a Voices in Leadership panel discussion during USF Health Multicultural Week in 2019. Pre-Covid photo.

While colleges of medicine, nursing and pharmacy focus on helping patients where they are downstream, sick that day, public health looks upstream and tries to address what has happened to bring them to that point. Instead of individual-based care, public health professionals look at the care of groups of people in the population and find and fill gaps in their access to health care or the conditions for people to be healthy. That’s why interprofessional education is a critical part of USF Health because both kinds of roles are important. “As part of the discipline of public health, you’re supposed to take care of those who are at a disadvantage,” Dr. Penniecook, said. “The structures and systems in this country have put certain populations immediately at a disadvantage just because of that’s who they are when they are born.”

An integral part of every accredited college of public health in the United States is making sure that students learn about health inequities that are based on disparities. At USF Health’s COPH, students not only have courses specifically on health inequities, but the topic is addressed in every public health course from the undergraduate to the graduate level. Having this thread at every level means that students learn what the basis of those health inequities are, what they look like and how to address them no matter where their career takes them. According to Dr. Penniecook, this means that if the student is going to be working in the community, they’ve learned about community education and teaching people about self-advocacy in the healthcare system; if the student is going to be working within the system, they’ve learned about how to measure and address health inequities; or if the student is going to have a leadership role, they’ve learned about being proactive in looking for ways to solve the health inequities such as policy development.

Prior to COVID-19, COPH started working on an academic master plan. Dr. Penniecook, described an academic master plan as a road map within the strategic initiatives of the institution, that tells you what you need to do academically to get to your goals. In response to the murder of George Floyd, Dr. Penniecook asked Donna Petersen, ScD, MHS, CPH, dean of the USF Health COPH, if they could integrate structural racism into the academic master plan. Just like MCOM’s Dr. Bognar was previously quoted as saying that these changes have to be “baked in” the curriculum, Dr. Penniecook wanted these efforts to combat structural racism to be more strategic and woven into everything they do and who they are, so that it’s more likely to stick. A variety of work groups will be formed to include faculty, staff and students to look at admissions, curriculum, teaching methods, educational spaces and recruitment, and then make recommendations to the college structure. While this master plan is a work in progress and was paused when COVID-19 first hit, Dr. Petersen has already impacted and set the tone for the two freshman courses she teaches as a part of the Master of Public Health program. She has always had a required summer reading list, but this past summer, the entire list was equipped with books on structural racism. In addition, different aspects of structural racism have been the topic of several of the College’s townhall meetings, some lead by students, as well as episodes of the Activist Lab’s Activist Lab on the Road podcast.

An interprofessional student team across the Colleges of Medicine, Nursing and Public Health, and the School of Physical Therapy, at the 2018 USF Health Research Day. Pre-Covid Photo.

The curriculum used to educate our future health care professionals is only one piece of the puzzle. The faculty who teach it are the other. “Student exposure to those from impoverished backgrounds may occur for the first time when they are in medical school,” Haywood Brown, MD, professor of obstetrics and gynecology, associate dean of diversity for USF MCOM, and vice president for institutional equity for the University of South Florida System, said. “They don’t get that in the classroom because there is so few, diverse faculty teaching the curriculum.” According to a board diversity statement from the American Council on Education (ACE), diversity in university student bodies, faculties and staff, enriches the educational experience, promotes personal growth and a health society, strengthens communities and the workplace, and enhances America’s economic competitiveness. “If you do not have a diverse workforce, the patients don’t benefit as much because you’re learning from each other,” Dr. Brown said.

In November 2020, the USF Health College of Nursing appointed Usha Menon, PhD, RN, FAAN, as the new dean after serving as interim dean of the College since February of that year. According to Dr. Roman, under this new leadership, one of the College’s initiatives is to increase the diversity, equity and inclusion not only in the curriculum, but also in the student, faculty and staff populations. As a part of this initiative, Dr. Menon realigned her senior administrators which included creating a director of diversity role, now filled by Ivonne Hernandez, PhD, RN, IBCLC, assistant professor at the USF CON. “What we are developing now, before we even start recruiting, is a way to retain,” Dr. Roman said. “We are nurse scientists, and we treat our patients and our students by the evidence. We are doing the same thing with diversity, equity and inclusion, and what our data shows is that when we have persons of color, they don’t stay.” CON’s strategic goals include increasing the diversity of research faculty by 35% and of clinical faculty by 10%, by 2023. One retention method coming soon is a mentoring program.

According to Dr. Roman, CON is not making these changes just to check off a box for diversity on a list of requirements. “The College of Nursing is doing a 360,” Dr. Roman said. “We’re changing everything. We are doing the right thing for all people and it’ll be a complete culture change.” A healthy and safe culture and work environment will also help retain high quality, diverse faculty. “We have to reiterate that incivility is not tolerated, and micro and macro aggressions are not tolerated,” Dr. Roman said. “We also have to bring to the forefront what already exists in the University processes for what to do if you feel violated and not to suffer in silence.”

Even outside of the university classrooms, USF Health students are coming together to fight racial disparities in the healthcare system. In August 2020, MCOM became an official chapter of the national White Coats 4 Black Lives. Open to all USF Health students, the goal of the organization is to safeguard the lives and well-being of patients through the elimination of racism. To accomplish this goal, WC4BL and the USF Health chapter look to foster dialogue on racism as a public health concern, end racial discrimination in medical care, and prepare future physicians to be advocates for racial justice. “It’s everyone’s responsibility, but it’s only a priority to some,” Smith said. “For those who make it their priority, we want to give them tools to learn how to engage in these spaces that make it safe for them and make it safe for the other person to have these kinds of courageous conversations. Equipping the next generation of thought leaders so they can change the thoughts out there.”



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