Brochure - New York State Council of Health

Transcription

Brochure - New York State Council of Health
Registration Fees
Early Bird Rate
until 12/17/14
Registration
after 12/17/14
Member:
$199
$249
NonMember
$225*
$275
Full Program (7 CE )
*NonMember fee includes One Year Membership to NYSCHP
(upon completion of NonMember registration, contact NYSCHP)
Saturday ONLY (2 CE )
Member:
$95
$145
NonMember:
$175
$225
Member:
$165
$215
NonMember:
$285
$335
Member:
$105
$155
NonMember:
$175
$225
Member:
$50
$100
NonMember:
$100
$150
Student/Resident Fee
$49
$99
Saturday & Sunday (5.5 CE)
It is our honor to memorialize
Dr. Jan Keltz in our annual
winter program. Dr. Keltz was
not only an outstanding
pharmacist, but an amazing
friend. His dedication to the
profession and NYSCHP is an
example to all of us.
Jan, you are missed.
New York State
Council of Healthsystem Pharmacists
2015 Winter Program
9th Annual Jan Keltz Memorial
7 Continuing Pharmacy Education
Credits
Winter Program
January 17-19, 2015
Sunday & Monday (5 CE)
Sunday ONLY (3.5 CE)
To register: Please visit our website, www.nyschp.org. The fees for
this program are above. Any cancelation received prior to 30 days
may request a 90% refund. Any cancelation within 30 days is not
refundable. Paid Registrants who fail to attend the conference will
not receive a refund. The right to cancel or change locations of the
seminar due to insufficient registration is reserved by NYSCHP;
registrants will be notified and receive a full refund.
Hotel Accommodations: You may make reservations under the
NYSCHP Room Block at the Crowne Plaza, 101 Olympic Drive,
Lake Placid, NY, 518-523-2556 f or 800-874-1980or a discounted
rate, if made by December 17, 2014. There is no food included in
the room rate.
Special Needs: If any participant of the “Winter Program” is in
need of accommodations, please do not hesitate to submit written
requests to Shaun Flynn at sflynn@nyschp.org, at least two weeks
prior to the program.
Audience: Pharmacists, pharmacy interns, residents, students and
industry personnel.
NYSCHP
210 Washington Avenue Extension
Albany, NY 12203
Phone: 518-456-8819
Fax: 518-456-9319
E-mail: jbleyl@nyschp.org
Crowne Plaza
101 Olympic Drive, Lake Placid, NY 12946
NYSCHP, 210 Washington Avenue
Extension, Albany, NY 12203
518-456-8819
Space is limited, register by going online to
www.nyschp.org
AGENDA
AGENDA Saturday, January 17, 2015
6:45am
Registration
7:30 -8:30 am
Breakfast sponsored by Cubist:
Room: Olympic 2
Current Issues with Multi-Drug Resistant Gram Negative Infections
Dorothy McCoy, PharmD
NO CE
5:00– 6:00 pm
Room: Olympic 2
Tipping The Scales: Weighing In On The New Weight
Loss Drugs
April Von Allmen, PharmD, Clinical Ambulatory Care
Pharmacist, Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Center
0134-0000-14-202-L01-P:
0.1 CEUs or 1 contact hours Knowledge Based
Pharmacists Learning Objectives:
Evaluate the prevalence of the obesity trend in the USA.
Describe patient motivations and expectations for weight-loss and
identify where they coincide and differ from provider understanding.
Outline the history of weight-loss products in American culture.
Explain the efficacy and risks of new weight-loss agents as related to
the current evidence to providers and patients.
6:00 – 7:00 pm Long Acting Injectable Antipsychotics:
Continuity of Care in the Inpatient and Outpatient setting
Room: Olympic 2
Anthony J Longo, Sr, BS, RPh, PharmD, Director of Pharmacy & Clinical Services, Behavioral Health Service LineZucker Hillside Hospital, Adjunct Professor of Pharmacology, Hofstra University - Physician Assistant Program 0134-0000-14-203-L01P:
0.1 CEUs or 1 contact hour Knowledge Based
Pharmacist Learning Objectives:
To identify the currently approved Long Acting Injectable
antipsychotics
To compare and contrast the currently approved Long Acting Antipsychotics
To identify appropriate patients for treatment with a Long
Acting Injectable antipsychotic
To describe continuity of care models when using a Long
Acting Injectable antipsychotic
7:00—8:00 pm Exhibits
Room: Olympic 1
Sunday, January 18, 2015
6:45am
Registration
7:00 – 8:00 am
Breakfast sponsored by Cubist:
Room: Olympic 2
Current Approaches for Antimicrobial Stewardship
Daryl Schiller, PharmD
NO CE
8:00-9:00am
Room: Olympic 2
Drug Interactions with New Anticoagulants
Michelle Friedman, B.S., Pharm.D., PGY-2 Internal Medicine
Pharmacy Resident, Department of Pharmacy, Kingsbrook Jewish
Medical Center
Chanie Wassner, Pharm.D., PGY-2 Critical Care Resident,
Department of Pharmacy, Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Center
0134-0000-14-204-L01-P:
0.1 CEU or 1 contact hour Knowledge Based
Pharmacist Learning Objectives:
Describe the pharmacology of rivaroxaban, apixaban, and dabigatran
Identify the bleeding profile of the new oral anticoagulants
Compare and contrast the drug interactions of warfarin, rivaroxaban,
apixaban, and dabigatran
Describe the implications of pharmacogenomics on new oral
anticoagulants
5:00-6:00pm
Room: Olympic 2
7:30-8:30pm
Exhibits
Room: Olympic 1
AGENDA: Monday, January 19, 2015
7:45am
Registration
8:00- 9:30 am
Room: Olympic 2
New Drug Approvals for 2014
Elizabeth A. Shlom, PharmD, BCPS, Senior Vice President &
Director, Clinical Pharmacy Program, GNYHA Services, Inc.
0134-0000-14-207-L01-P
0.15 CEUs or 1.5 contact hour Knowledge Based
Pharmacist Learning Objectives:
Identify the new molecular entities and biologic medications approved by
the FDA in 2014.
List at least three new orphan drugs and their indications.
Describe the place in therapy of at least five new medications approved in
2014.
List new medications with serious medication safety concerns and describe
REMS programs associated with these medications.
Discuss emerging trends in new drug approvals.
*Program Subject to Change
A Pharmacy Leader’s Agenda: Challenges in NYS
Pharmacy Practice (Roundtable format)
Frank P. Sosnowski, MS
0134-0000-14-205-L01-P:
0.1 CEUs or 1 contact hour Knowledge Based
Pharmacists Learning Objectives:
Discuss the value, feasibility and challenges of Technicians checking
technicians in an Automated Department of Pharmacy
Review the methodologies used to standardize implementation of
technology in a multi-hospital health system
Discuss the impact of the new sterile compounding law on health-systems
in New York state
Discuss the challenges and benefits of implementing ASHP’s PPMI
model in a large multi-hospital system.
6:00-7:30pm Applying Concepts of Medication Safety into
Pharmacy Practice
Room: Olympic 2
Anthony J Longo, Sr, BS, RPh, PharmD, Director of Pharmacy & Clinical
Services, Zucker Hillside Hospital
Leigh A. Briscoe-Dwyer, PharmD, BCPS, FASHP, Chief Pharmacy and
Medication Safety Officer, North Shore– LIJ Health-system
0134-0000-14-206-L05-P
0.15 CEUs or 1.5 contact hour
Knowledge Based
Pharmacist Learning Objectives:
Describe national regulations and local but universally adopted practices
related to reporting and benchmarking of adverse drug reaction reporting.
Define attributes of a highly reliable medication use system.
List 3 accountability measures for safety surrounding medication use.
Identify risk factors associated with adverse events for patients during
transitions of care.
Quantify the complexity of a patients medication regimen to identify
patients who could benefit from pharmacist intervention.
New York State Council of Health-system Pharmacists is
accredited by the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy
Education as a provider of continuing pharmacy education. Fully
completed online evaluation forms are required to obtain continuing
education. On line evaluation is provided at cesally.com Attendance is
verified through the use of a CE Code.
Please be aware that you have 45 days from the date of the
program to obtain your CE credits from cesally.com
In order to obtain your credits, you must set up an account
on cesally.com using the email address you provided to
NYSCHP. An invite will be sent to this email address to allow
access.
CE Sally Instructions
Don’t wait until it’s too late, if you need assistance, please
call the office at 518-456-8819.