Life-Changing Service

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Life-Changing Service PHARMACY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION & SCHOOL OF PHARMACY NEWS SPRING 2017 LIFE-CHANGING SERVICE Student pharmacists Christian Michelet, ’20, Derry McDonald, ’19, and Kathleen Pierce, ’19, provided flu vaccinations to residents of Tent City 3. As part of the UW’s educational mission and existing work to address homelessness, the Seattle campus hosted the residents Winter Quarter. Tent City 3 provides safe, secure temporary housing to individuals and families. Dawg Scripts Produced by the UW School of Pharmacy, with support from the Pharmacy Alumni Association (PAA) Editor and Writer: Sarah C.B. Guthrie Contributors: Sean D. Sullivan, Nicole Angus, Caryl Corsi, Douglas Esser, Claire Forster, Gary Harris, Dana Hurley, Ron Klein, Rene Levy, Ryan Oftebro From the PAA President Designer: Sarah C.B. Guthrie Photographers: Claire Forster, Sarah C.B. Your membership in the Pharmacy Guthrie, Matt Hagen, Alex Levine, Jeannine Alumni Association matters. McCune PAA OFFICERS You might question the impact of an annual membership gift, but when President: Gary Harris, ’72 Past President: Jennifer Glasco, ’09 combined with the gifts of hundreds of fellow alumni, your membership COMMITTEE LEADERS makes a profound difference to current and future pharmacists alike. If you Alumni Recognition: Scott Herzog, ’03 haven’t yet joined the PAA, or if your membership has lapsed, I invite you to lend Arizona: David Bailey, ’70 Class Representatives: Judi Mar-Burbidge, a hand to our efforts. ’82, ’00 (1980s), Ben Michaels, ’97, ’11 (1990s) Your membership gifts allow us to connect and strengthen our alumni Eastern WA: Michael VanLaanen, ’11 Events: Jennifer Glasco, ’09 network and the profession itself. How do alumni like you make a difference? Katterman: Adam Brothers, ’06 • You support reunions, like last year’s 30-year and 10-year alumni reunions Marketing: Jenny Arnold, ’03 Mentorship: Christy Weiland, ’07 for the classes of 1986 and 2006, as well as a luncheon for graduates of 50 or WSPA: Jeff Rochon, ’99 more years ago. CONTACT PAA • You support learning opportunities like the annual Don B. Katterman Lecture UW School of Pharmacy (May 10, 2017), at which the PAA offers CE credit at no additional cost for PAA Box 357631 members. Seattle, WA 98195 (206) 616-5371 • You facilitate communication between the School and alumni. PAA [email protected] membership makes publications like this issue of Dawg Scripts possible. sop.uw.edu/paa • Your gifts to the PAA Scholarship Fund empower current students. Together, we have supported fifteen students since 2011! CONNECT: The UW School of Pharmacy may be one of the smaller schools on campus, but we have consistently been the most loyal in giving back to our school, and the sop.uw.edu impact of those collective gifts is clear. Help keep the UW School of Pharmacy at the head of the Dawg Pack! Turn to www.facebook.com/UWSOP pages 10-11 to find an envelope that will make it easy to renew your www.linkedin.com* tax-deductible membership or join PAA. Your membership even counts toward Tyee points! Just fill out the form, include payment and return the post- @UW_Pharmacy age-paid envelope or scan the QR code below to fill out the membership online— it’s that easy to make a difference. @UW_Pharmacy *Join our UW School of Pharmacy “Graduate Programs Alumni and Friends” or “Pharmacy Practice Alumni and Friends” LinkedIn group. On the cover: Student pharmacists Christian Michelet, ’20, Derry McDonald, ’19, and Kathleen Pierce, ’19, provided flu vaccinations to Gary Harris, ’72 residents of Tent City 3. As part of the UW’s educa- tional mission and existing work to address home- President, Pharmacy Alumni Association lessness, the Seattle campus hosted the residents Join or renew your PAA membership Winter Quarter. Tent City 3 provides safe, secure by scanning this QR code or using temporary housing to individuals and families. the envelope between pages 10-11. 2 UW SCHOOL OF PHARMACY From the Dean I’m pleased to say we keep running into the problem of having too much good news to share in just one issue of Dawg Scripts. The stories in this issue show we UPCOMING EVENTS are engaged in the most important work of our lifetime—stories about leadership, pioneering alumni, student success, faculty serving communities, and Don B. Katterman Memorial Lecture the many advances of our research teams. I am pleased to be able to share these & Dean’s Recognition Reception stories with you and hope that you are as proud of your school as I am. May 10 @ 5:30 p.m. HUB, UW Campus We are living in challenging and ever-changing times. In a communication I sent Seattle, Washington out at the beginning of the new year, I reiterated that we are a purpose-driven, diverse, and vibrant community that cares deeply about science, education, and health care—in service to the health of our patients and communities. I ISPOR Pharmaceutical Outcomes challenged our faculty, staff and students to be guided by our core values and Research and Policy Program (PORPP) Alumni Gathering our mission to serve patients and our communities, regardless of the challenges May 22 @ 5 p.m. we face. This is our North Star and I am happy to say that together, we continue to make a life-changing impact on our communities. We are working toward an The Back Bay Social Club effective vaccine for HIV, training tomorrow’s health care leaders and providers Boston, MA in Ghana, creating an affordable alternative to the EpiPen, understanding how we might defeat MRSA, and improving drug safety and delivery. WSPA Northwest Pharmacy Convention UW Reception One of the most exciting aspects of all this work is that many of these initiatives June 3 @ 5 p.m. are led by our own students, some now alumni, some still enrolled. As Dean, I Coeur d’Alene Resort want us to engage diverse, top tier students who seek to develop and excel as Coeur d’Alene, Idaho leaders, collaborators, scientists and providers of patient-centered care. This fall, the University launched its most ambitious campaign and we embraced School of Pharmacy Graduate the challenge to raise our own standards even higher. The Campaign for UWSOP Recognition Ceremony seeks to increase funding for our faculty and students’ training and research. June 9 @ 3:30 p.m. At this year’s annual Scholarship Reception, I thanked donors who enabled us Meany Hall to give over $500,000 in scholarships and fellowships to PharmD and graduate UW Campus, Seattle students—a 20 percent increase over the prior year. Next year, I’d like to see us double our scholarships. Dean’s Club Night at the Mariners—By We cannot do this work without you. I invite you to join us in our Campaign to invitation only make a difference for Washington and for the world. Have a look through this June 22 @ 5:30 p.m. issue, follow us on social media, and let us know how our Campaign co-chairs, Assistant Dean Claire Forster, and I can connect to your passion for UWSOP. Safeco Field, Seattle, WA Thank you on behalf of our entire School community. We are grateful for your continued support and enthusiasm. I hope to see you at an upcoming event or UWSOP Alumni & Friends Reception in conference this summer! Portland, Oregon June 23 @ 6 p.m. Noble Rot Portland, Oregon Sean D. Sullivan, Professor and Dean, UW School of Pharmacy DAWG SCRIPTS SPRING 2017 3 Vandana Slatter, ’90, appointed to Washington state legislature In January, at a meeting of the Doctor of Pharmacy Program, which State Board of Pharmacy. “I gained King County Council, UW School of was not offered in Canada at the time. a lot of team-based problem solv- Pharmacy alumna Vandana Slatter, After licensing and some time practic- ing skills at UWSOP. I learned there’s PharmD, MPA (D-Bellevue) was ing as a hospital pharmacist, she spent something magical when a team can appointed to represent the 48th over 20 years working in the pharma/ come together to problem solve—if we Legislative District in the Washington biotech industry for Pharmacia, UCB, keep our focus on our mission.” Her House of Representatives. Her Roche/Genentech and Amgen in vari- time at UWSOP was more than team appointment to the state legislature ous roles in drug information, clinical skill-building—learning how to share is a new turn in her move to a career research, R&D strategy, new products information in a stressful environment in public service. Vandana grew marketing, and medical affairs. She helped as well. “Presentations aren’t up in northern British Columbia, was the founder of the ACCP Industry as daunting for me now because of Canada. Her father was a physician Practice and Research Network (PRN) that training. Three hour oral exams who had emigrated “At the UW School of Pharmacy, I learned how to work make you think on from India and he your feet and learn encouraged her to with and lead a healthcare team for the benefit of the that it’s ok to say, pursue pharmacy patient. These skills have become equally vital in my role ‘I don’t know.’” In as a career. “We 2013, she decided to had a pharmacist as a public servant and government leader.” run for public office neighbor, who was and campaigned able to balance a WASHINGTON STATE REPRESENTATIVE VANDANA SLATTER, PHARMD, ‘90 for Bellevue City successful career and family—she in 1998, at a time when more and Council. She lost. “I call it my political was able to make it all work,” she more career roles in industry were MBA—I learned so much about how remembers.
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