The Elective Rotation: A Critical Care Hospital Pharmacy Podcast Pharmacy Joe
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The Elective Rotation - the number 1 ranked Hospital Pharmacy podcast - is created for YOU Pharmacy Nation! If you are a Pharmacy Student, Resident, Pharmacist, Nurse, Physician, or Critical Care Practitioner in a hospital, intensive care unit (ICU) or emergency department looking to improve your practice, The Elective Rotation delivers unbiased critical care and hospital pharmacy content from a Board Certified Pharmacotherapy Specialist. Episodes are published every Monday and Thursday at 3AM EST. Find the show notes at pharmacyjoe.com.
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916: The 4 categories of interventions to treat medication overdose and why antidote is not #1
Show notes at pharmacyjoe.com/episode916. In this episode, I’ll discuss the 4 categories of interventions to treat medication overdose and why antidote is not #1.
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915: The rare case when a very hypotonic solution may be indicated
Show notes at pharmacyjoe.com/episode915. In this episode, I’ll discuss the rare case when a very hypotonic solution may be indicated.
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914: Does Oral Phosphate Replacement Work as Well as IV For Critically Ill Patients With Mild to Moderate Hypophosphatemia?
Show notes at pharmacyjoe.com/episode914. In this episode, I’ll discuss oral vs IV phosphate replacement for critically ill patients with mild to moderate hypophosphatemia.
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913: Is there an efficacy tradeoff when reducing apixaban dose in patients with end-stage renal disease?
Show notes at pharmacyjoe.com/episode913. In this episode, I’ll discuss the efficacy tradeoff when reducing apixaban dose in patients with end-stage renal disease.
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912: Are Standard Doses of Apixaban as Effective as Warfarin in Patients With Severe Obesity?
Show notes at pharmacyjoe.com/episode912. In this episode, I’ll discuss whether standard doses of apixaban are as effective as warfarin in severe obesity.
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911: But They Have Altered Mental Status So We Have To Treat
Show notes at pharmacyjoe.com/episode911. In this episode, I’ll discuss the risk of bacteremia in patients with asymptomatic bacteriuria and altered mental status.