Supported by the Oddis Endowment's Marvin Samson Fund
The Joseph A. Oddis Ethics Colloquium was established by the ASHP Foundation to pay tribute to one of pharmacy's most distinguished leaders and will assist health-system pharmacists in confronting ethical challenges in pharmacy practice and patient care. The colloquium is held annually in conjunction with the ASHP Midyear Clinical Meeting.
2011 Ethics Colloquium
Ethical Dilemmas in Health-System Pharmacy: Awareness, Confidence, Courage, and Action
Sunday, December 04, 2011
1 - 4 p.m.
New Orleans Ernest N. Morial Convention Center, Room 272, Level 2
Planned in cooperation with the ASHP Research & Education Foundation, the ASHP Student Forum, and the ASHP New Practitioners Forum
Learning Objectives
• Apply a systematic approach to analyzing ethical situations in health-system pharmacy.
• Identify three or more causes of moral distress in health-system pharmacy.
• Formulate and defend an ethically defensible position when confronted with a morally troubling situation in pharmacy practice.
• Discuss the relationship between moral courage and patient safety in health-system pharmacy.
• Identify two or more ethical implications that arise when a pharmacist acts as a patient's advocate.
Agenda
Moderator: William A. Zellmer, BS (Pharmacy), MPH, Consultant, Bethesda, MD
1:00 p.m. - 1:05 p.m.
The Joseph A. Oddis Ethics Colloquium
Stephen Allen, RPh, MS, Executive Vice President and Chief Executive Officer, ASHP Research and Education Foundation, Bethesda, MD
1:05 p.m. - 1:15 p.m.
Introduction to the Session
William A. Zellmer, BS (Pharmacy), MPH, Consultant, Bethesda, MD
1:15 p.m. - 1:30 p.m.
Framework for Ethical Decision Making
Michael Manolakis, PharmD, PhD, Assistant Dean of Planning, Wingate University School of Pharmacy, Wingate, NC
1:30 p.m. - 2:15 p.m.
Case Presentation and Discussion: A Teenager in Pain and a Demanding Mother
Lea S. Eiland, PharmD, BCPS, Associate Clinical Professor and Associate Department Head, Auburn University Harrison School of Pharmacy, Huntsville, AL
Michael Manolakis, PharmD, PhD, Assistant Dean of Planning, Wingate University School of Pharmacy, Wingate, NC
William A. Zellmer, BS (Pharmacy), MPH, Consultant, Bethesda, MD
2:15 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.
Presentation and Discussion: Not Ready to Launch
William A. Zellmer, BS (Pharmacy), MPH, Consultant, Bethesda, MD
James R. Rinehart, RPh, MS, FASHP, Medication Safety Officer, Indiana University Health, Indianapolis
Michael Manolakis, PharmD, PhD, Assistant Dean of Planning, Wingate University School of Pharmacy, Wingate, NC
3:00 p.m. - 3:45 p.m.
Case Presentation and Discussion: Pharmacist as Patient's Friend and Advocate
William A. Zellmer, BS (Pharmacy), MPH, Consultant, Bethesda, MD
David Angaran, MS, FASHP, Director MTM Call Center , University of Florida, College of Pharmacy, Gainesville
Michael Manolakis, PharmD, PhD, Assistant Dean of Planning, Wingate University School of Pharmacy, Wingate, NC
3:45 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.
Questions, Answers, and Discussion
Presenters
Stephen J. Allen, R.Ph., M.S., FASHP
Stephen J. Allen is the Executive Vice President and Chief Executive Officer of the ASHP Research and Education Foundation.
William A. Zellmer, B.S.Pharm., M.P.H.
William A. Zellmer Bill Zellmer currently serves as a consultant, writer, and speaker on strategic and professional issues in pharmacy practice. He holds appointments as Clinical Professor on the affiliate faculty of the School of Pharmacy, Virginia Commonwealth University; Contributing Editor, American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy; and Historian, American Society of Health-System Pharmacists. Bill retired from the staff of ASHP at the end of 2009. He served for nearly 40 years there in various capacities, including Deputy Executive Vice President and, earlier, as Editor of the American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy. Some of Bills AJHP editorials were compiled in 2002 in a book entitled, The Conscience of a PharmacistEssays on Vision and Leadership for a Profession. Bill has a special interest in fostering what he calls authentic professionalism among pharmacists, which he believes will be required for pharmacy to truly reform itself as a patient-care health profession. Bill is a native of Wisconsin and is a pharmacy graduate of the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He completed an ASHP-accredited pharmacy residency in the U.S. Public Health Service, and he holds a Master of Public Health degree from The Johns Hopkins University.
Michael Manolakis, Pharm.D., Ph.D.
Michael Manolakis, PharmD, PhD, currently serves as Assistant Dean of Planning at Wingate University School of Pharmacy in Wingate, NC. A native of New Jersey, Dr. Manolakis earned his Doctor of Pharmacy degree from the University of Southern California and his PhD in Philosophy with a concentration in Bioethics from the University of Tennessee. Dr. Manolakis has worked as a retail pharmacist, in managed care pharmacy, and as a consultant. His managed care efforts span 15 years where he worked in clinical services and on the business side in sales, account management and marketing. Dr. Manolakis recently completed the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy Academic Leadership Fellows Program. He has presented on topics in bioethics to numerous national audiences and currently serves on the Bioethics Advisory Board for the University of North Carolina, Charlotte. His most recent research publication focused on teaching empathy to student pharmacists. He and his wife, Patti and their three boys live in Charlotte, NC. Dr. Manolakis spends most weekends at soccer fields around North Carolina cheering on his boys and their teams.
David Angaran, M.S., FASHP
Mr. Angaran received his BS in Pharmacy from Drake University, in 1968 and MS in hospital pharmacy and residency from the University of Wisconsin, in 1970. As a critical care clinical practitioner educator he served as pharmacy faculty at the University of Wisconsin (1970-76), University of Minnesota (1976-1990) and University of Florida (1990-95) where he was Professor and Chair, Pharmacy Practice Department. He was elected to the ASHP board of directors, in 1988. Mr. Angaran left academia to pursue his interests in delivery of pharmacy care at a distance, working for Medco Health Solutions, an e-pharmacy startupcranespharmacy.com and a specialty pharmacy, Chronimed, Inc. In, 1998, he completed a one year ASHP managed care residency investigating Telemedicine and Telepharmacy. After a trial of semi retirement he returned to the University of Florida College of Pharmacy, in 2004, in the Office of Experiential Programs. Being old enough to qualify for Medicare he was selected to be Medicare Part D point person for the UF College of Pharmacy and has presented to health care professionals and the lay public about the topic. Most recently he was responsible for a $2.5 million contract to establish a Medication Therapy Management call center in the College of Pharmacy. He most recent award was the 2006 ASHP Award for Distinguished Leadership in Health Systems Pharmacy.
Lea S. Eiland, Pharm.D., BCPS
Lea S. Eiland, Pharm.D., BCPS is an Associate Clinical Professor and Associate Department Head of Pharmacy Practice with Auburn University Harrison School of Pharmacy and a Clinical Assistant Professor of Pediatrics with the University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Medicine, Huntsville Regional Medical Campus. Dr. Eiland graduated with her Doctor of Pharmacy from The University of Texas at Austin and The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio and completed a pediatric specialty residency at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center at Amarillo. Dr. Eiland joined the Auburn faculty in August of 2002 and practices in Huntsville, Alabama at Huntsville Hospital Women and Children. Her interests include infectious disease and neurology.
James R. Rinehart, R.Ph., M.S., FASHP
James R. Rinehart, R.Ph., M.S., FASHP is the Medication Safety Officer at Indiana University Health. He received his Bachelor of Science and Master of Science pharmacy degrees from the University of Wisconsin Madison. He completed an administrative residency at the University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics. His practice experience includes academic medical centers, nonacademic medical centers and long term care pharmacy practice in administrative and clinical roles. Mr. Rinehart is a member of the clinical advisory board of the Institute for Safe Medication Practices Medication Safety Alert newsletter, acute care edition. He is a past chair of the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists (ASHP) Section of Pharmacy Practice Managers. He previously chaired the ASHP Section Advisory Group on Workload and Productivity Monitoring, served as a member of the ASHP Council on Professional Affairs, and served as a member of the ASHP House of Delegates. Mr. Rinehart is a past member of the Nebraska Pharmacists Association (NPA) board of directors. He is also a past chair of the NPA education committee. In 2003, he received the NPA Health-System Pharmacist of the Year award. Mr. Rinehart has presented and published in a variety of areas of health system pharmacy practice.