Pharmacists have a wide range of duties and many are unique to the pharmacist’s chosen
specialty. A community pharmacist promotes wellness and improves patient care by dispensing
accurate and safe prescriptions. They analyze the properties of medications in order
to avoid drug interactions and inform patients and caregivers of safe use practices.
Acute care pharmacists assess patient health history and risk factors to prepare medication treatment plans,
often in collaboration with other healthcare team members. Ambulatory care pharmacists perform assessments on patients managing chronic disease states, such as hypertension,
diabetes, HIV and many more.
Explore PCOM's Pharmacy Specialty Concentrations
Shari Allen, PharmD, BCPP, explains, “You can be a hospital pharmacist, a clinical pharmacist, a psychiatric
pharmacist; you can work in academia, nuclear pharmacy.” Future pharmacists in our
4-year Doctor of Pharmacy (PharmD) degree program are exposed to multiple specialty areas and practices.
Other responsibilities of a pharmacist include:
- Administering vaccines and performing point-of-care testing (POCT).
- Participating in patient rounds in a hospital setting.
- Conducting research/clinical drug trials.
- Compounding medications for patients who need customized treatment.
- Working with insurance companies to develop pharmacy benefits for health plans.
- Teaching, training and supervising pharmacy students and residents.