ARKANSAS CHILDREN'S IS A TOBACCO FREE WORKPLACE. FLU VACCINES ARE REQUIRED. ARKANSAS CHILDREN'S IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER. ALL QUALIFIED APPLICANTS WILL RECEIVE CONSIDERATION FOR EMPLOYMENT WITHOUT REGARD TO RACE, COLOR, RELIGION, SEX, SEXUAL ORIENTATION, GENDER IDENTITY OR EXPRESSION, NATIONAL ORIGIN, AGE, DISABILITY, PROTECTED VETERAN STATUS OR ANY OTHER CHARACTERISTIC PROTECTED BY FEDERAL, STATE, OR LOCAL LAWS.
CURRENT EMPLOYEES: Please apply via the internal career site by logging into your Workday Account (https://www.myworkday.com/archildrens/)and search the "Find Jobs" report.
Work Shift:
Please see job description for details.
Time Type:
Full time
Department:
CC014250 Acute Care Pharmacy
The Pharmacy Resident I (PGY1) provides pharmacy-related clinical and educational services to patients and healthcare providers across multiple practice areas. The residentcompletes learning experiences and activities designed to advance skill in diverse patient care, practice management, leadership, and education.
Doctorate of Pharmacy or Bachelor of Pharmacy (if obtained prior to 2000)
Doctoral Degree
Pharmacist - Arkansas State Board of Pharmacy
1. Participates as a member of the healthcare team to support comprehensive medication management using a consistent patient care process.
2.Evaluates medication therapies,monitorspatient outcomes, and contributes to the development and implementation of medication-related care plans.
3. Develops foundational understanding of medication-use processes and formulary management.Assistswith activities related to medication safety, formulary review, and medication-use evaluation to support safe and effective drug therapy across the organization.
4. Participates in the design, implementation, and evaluation of a quality improvement or research project. Collects and analyzes data, contributes to project development, and presents findings to pharmacy leadership and healthcare teams.
5. Builds leadership, communication, and professional practice skills through participation in interdisciplinary care teams, residency learning activities, and professional development opportunities.
6. Provides medication-related education to patients, caregivers, healthcare professionals, students , and the publicunder the guidance of residency preceptors. Participates in formal presentations, case discussions, and teaching activities to support clinical learning.
7. Assistswith medication preparation, verification processes, and medication distribution activities to ensuretimelyandaccuratedelivery of medications that support safe and effective patient care.

Arkansas Children's is the only healthcare system in the state solely dedicated to caring for Arkansas' more than 700,000 children. The private, non-profit organization includes two pediatric hospitals, a pediatric research institute and USDA nutrition center, a philanthropic foundation, a nursery alliance, statewide clinics, and many education and outreach programs — all focused on fulfilling a promise to define and deliver unprecedented child health. Arkansas Children’s Hospital (ACH) is a 336-bed, Magnet-recognized facility in Little Rock operating the state’s only Level I pediatric trauma center; the state's only burn center; the state's only Level IV neonatal intensive care unit; the state's only pediatric intensive care unit; the state’s only pediatric surgery program with Level 1 verification from the American College of Surgeons (ACS); the state’s only magnetoencephalography (MEG) system for neurosurgical planning and cutting-edge research; and the state's only nationally recognized pediatric transport program. Arkansas Children’s Hospital is nationally ranked by U.S. News & World Report in seven pediatric specialties (2022—2023): Cancer, Cardiology & Heart Surgery, Diabetes & Endocrinology, Nephrology, Neurology & Neurosurgery, Pulmonology and Urology. Arkansas Children’s Northwest (ACNW), the first and only pediatric hospital in the Northwest Arkansas region, is a level IV pediatric trauma center. ACNW operates a 24-bed inpatient unit; a surgical unit with five operating rooms; outpatient clinics offering over 20 subspecialties; diagnostic services; imaging capabilities; occupational therapy services; and Northwest Arkansas' only pediatric emergency department, equipped with 30 exam rooms. Generous philanthropic and volunteer engagement has sustained Arkansas Children's since it began as an orphanage in 1912, and today ensures the system can deliver on its promise of unprecedented child health. To learn more, visit archildrens.org.