Inpatient Psychiatric Unit (IPU)
Preceptors: Joel Grussendorf, BCPP; Rachel Bauer, BCPS, BCPP; Cathy Yao.
There are four teams within this 30-bed unit and various trainees of all disciplines with whom the resident will be working (psychology interns, physician assistants (PA), nurse practitioners (NP), psychiatry residents, etc.). The resident teaches patient education groups, is involved in daily patient rounds, completes admission and discharge medication reconciliations, provides medication management and treatment recommendations, and leads topic discussions. There are usually opportunities to precept students and residents during this rotation.
Substance Abuse Residential Rehabilitation Treatment Program (SARRTP)
Preceptors: Sadie Roestenburg, PharmD, BCPP; Audrey Wadhwani, PharmD, BCPP
SARRTP is a 15-bed residential treatment program for Veterans with substance use disorders and often-times concomitant mental health disorders, including PTSD. The Veterans reside on the unit for 5-9 weeks depending on their treatment plan (SUD vs. SUD + PTSD treatment). The pharmacy resident will interact with a dynamic interdisciplinary clinical staff (psychiatrist, physician assistant, social workers, psychologists, recreational therapist, etc.), along with various trainees in these areas. The resident completes admission and discharge medication reconciliations, provides medication management and treatment recommendations for the team, and leads patient education groups and topic discussions. Other experiences include participating in didactic lectures with psychiatric residents at the University Neuropsychiatric Institute, and attending the Veteran groups related to SUD treatment to obtain different perspectives about residential treatment.
Services for Outpatient Addiction and Recovery (SOAR) clinic
Preceptor: Zac Hill, BCPP
The SOAR team, embedded within Addiction Treatment Services (ATS), is an interdisciplinary team focused on caring for those with addiction and co-occurring mental health, medical, and psychosocial issues. Throughout a Veteran’s course of treatment, the SOAR team provides care coordination through a stepped care model. The resident will see patients for mental health medication management appointments, provide medication management recommendations to psychiatric staff, and coordinate medication-assisted treatment (MAT) for patients. They will have the opportunity to lead patient education groups in the intensive outpatient program and develop topic discussions related to SUDs. The resident will interact with various disciplines and trainees (psychology, social work, psychiatry, and nursing, etc.) as well as participate in didactic lectures with psychiatric residents at University Neuropsychiatric Institute. Other experiences may include assisting with lectures for University of Utah pharmacy students and participating in recovery-oriented substance abuse groups to experience multiple facets of outpatient substance abuse treatment.
Vulnerable Veteran Innovated Patient Aligned Care Team (VIP-PACT)
Preceptors: Amy Butz, BCPP; Natalie Valentino, BCPP
The VIP team offers a unique primary care service delivery model with a goal to improve the health of Veterans who are particularly vulnerable due to medical disease and/or their social determinants. This includes Veterans with substance use disorders, co-occurring addiction and pain disorders, social determinants of health (ex. homelessness), and high utilizers of healthcare services. The VIP team consists of 2 MH/SUD PharmDs, 3 addiction medicine MDs, a mental health APRN, and a social worker who work collaboratively to determine appropriate treatment plans. On this unique rotation, the resident will have the opportunity to manage patients longitudinally for OUD/AUD MAT, including management of buprenorphine/naloxone, manage mental health medications, and fully integrate into the team through shared medical appointments with primary care providers.
Outpatient Mental Health (OMH) and Primary Care Mental Health Integration
Preceptor: Jeff Gower, BCPP, BCPS
This rotation provides exposure to a broad range of outpatient mental health care experiences. The resident will build relationships with other practitioners and improve medication management abilities through participation in several services, including: clozapine clinic, Mental Health Intensive Case Management (MHICM) team which serves Veterans with serious mental illnesses in the community, and Primary Care Mental Health Integration (PCMHI). Additional rotation activities include completing mental health pharmacist consults, non-formulary review, coordination of long-acting injectable antipsychotics, and supporting the lithium monitoring clinic.
Mental Health Consult Liaison
Preceptor: Zac Hill, BCPP
The resident will work in an interdisciplinary team consisting of psychology, social work, neurology, and psychiatry to assess and evaluate patients on inpatient medical floors of the hospital with acute mental health needs. The resident will be expected to respond to consults/pages placed by acute medicine teams, assess disease state endorsed for evaluation, goals of care, and obtain pertinent social history from patients through clinical interviewing. Expectation of pharmacy resident will be to function in the same capacity as psychiatric medical residents to develop clinical interviewing skills, communication with acute care medical team for recommendations, and documentation of recommended interventions for medications, non-pharmacologic, and follow-up for all parties involved.
Toxicology - Utah Poison Control Center
Director of Utah Poison Control Center: Amberly Johnson PharmD, DABAT.
Preceptors: there are approximately 12 preceptors that rotate the precepting responsibilities depending on days/times of year of the rotation.
Utah Poison Control Center (UPCC) is a certified regional poison control center, established in 1954 that serves the entire state of Utah and is located on the University of Utah campus. The UPCC responds to approximately 120 requests for assistance daily and over 40,000 cases annually. The service is staffed around-the-clock by pharmacists and nurses who have additional training in clinical toxicology. Students on rotation will interact with various members of the UPCC team. Students will meet almost daily with medical toxicologists who will participate in rounds, inpatient bedside consults, and topic discussions, weekly with SPIs that include a nurse and pharmacists, and several times with the health education staff in discussions about and participation in outreach education. Students and residents on rotation will be involved in the management of cases that are admitted to the hospital for treatment, which is approximately 5% of all cases managed by the poison center and represents the most seriously ill. Trainees will conduct telephone follow-up calls, work up patients, provide recommendations to healthcare providers, present patient cases, present topic discussions, and more.