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Why Pharmacy?

Pharmacists are medication experts who enhance patient care and promote wellness.  You will use your professional knowledge as a pharmacist to prepare and dispense prescriptions, ensure medicines and doses are correct, prevent harmful drug interactions, and counsel patients on the safe and appropriate use of their medications. As a pharmacist, you will have unique and specialized expertise about the composition of medicines, including their chemical, biological, and physical properties, as well as their manufacture and use. Other health care professionals will rely on you to select and administer medications that offer the best results and quality of life for a particular patient. As a pharmacist you may prepare personalized medications, participate in patient rounds at the hospital, reduce the spread of infections, conduct research or clinical trials, or focus on a specific patient population or disease state (e.g., diabetes, heart disease, asthma, HIV, and pain management). Be a pharmacist and help people live better, healthier lives!

Explore this rewarding and challenging profession through the resources below, courtesy of the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy.

Pharmacy Is Right for Me 

Top ten reasons to become a pharmacist

To determine which career may suit you best, consider the resources below. 

APhA Career Pathway Evaluation Program 

Pharmacy is Right For Me Novel Practice Settings

For more information about the profession of pharmacy visit these websites:

www.aacp.org - American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy

www.aphanet.org - American Pharmacists Association

www.accp.com - American College of Clinical Pharmacy

www.ashp.org - American Society of Health System Pharmacists

Pharmacists - the Medication Experts

Gone are the days where pharmacists are responsible only for filling and refilling prescriptions. Pharmacists of today are called upon to be part of a health team, actively caring for patients in collaboration with primary care and other providers. Idaho and Alaska enjoy very advanced pharmacy practice capacity, allowing pharmacists to practice at the top of their education. A few of the many career options are listed here.

  • Community – Community pharmacists work in pharmacies in their communities located in grocery stores, chair pharmacies and independent pharmacies. Majority of the US population lives within 5 miles of a community pharmacy, making the pharmacists the most accessible healthcare provider. Community pharmacists’ responsibilities include but are not limited to dispensing medications, educating the community, providing immunizations, providing recommendations for over-the-counter treatment, referring patients to treatment when appropriate. In Idaho with expanded pharmacy practice laws, community pharmacists are able to prescribe medications for minor and self-limiting illnesses, travel medications, prescribe for tobacco cessation, epinephrine and opioid antagonist treatments. Community pharmacists also offer clinical services such as medication therapy management (MTM) and work with other healthcare providers.
  • Hospital – Hospital pharmacists work in hospital and can work in a variety of settings performing a variety of duties. Some of the duties could be working in centralized pharmacy verifying and processing physician orders, working with patients to perform medication reconciliation and education, working with medical and specialty teams to provide direct patient care such as monitoring medications for safety and efficacy, adjusting the medications as appropriate. Some hospital systems may require pharmacist to complete post-graduate training to be able to work as a clinical or hospital pharmacist.
  • Clinical – Many clinical positions where pharmacists work directly with patients as well as other healthcare professional and make interventions to the patients care require addition post-graduate training or residency. Residency training can be 1 year where the resident experiences a variety of clinical pharmacy setting and gets a broad clinical education. Clinical pharmacists can specialize in a variety of different fields such as pediatrics, critical care, emergency medicine, cardiology, psychiatric pharmacy, infections disease, oncology, drug information. Some of the specialties may require an addition year of residency training focusing in that specific area.
  • Government or regulatory agencies – Pharmacist can work for a variety of federal or state regulatory agencies such as prisons, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid, Department of defense, Drug Enforcement Administration, Food and Drug Administration, Indian Health services, U.S. Public Health Service, state board of pharmacy, state department of health, state Medicaid services.
  • Long-term care – Pharmacist working in pharmacies that provide medication and clinical pharmacy services to long-term care facilities such as assisted living or skilled nursing homes or rehabilitation facilities.
  • Managed Care – Manage care focuses on providing cost effective care with a focus on preventative measures. This included optimizing drug therapy, developing therapeutic protocols and formularies (lists of preferred cost-effective medications).
  • Pharmaceutical industry – Pharmacists working in the pharmaceutical industry can work with drug research and development, in an administrative capacity, business management, marketing, drug information, medical science liaison.
  • Academia – Pharmacist working in academia have a primary focus of educating future pharmacists as well as advancing the profession of pharmacy through clinical work and research.

Why ISU?


The Idaho State University College of Pharmacy offers a professional doctorate that focuses on improving clinical outcomes and improving the quality of patient life. The Mission, Goals and Objectives of the ISU College of Pharmacy and our Curricular Philosophy Statement underscore the overarching educational principles of our program.

Specifically, we educate pharmacists to:

  • Provide quality pharmaceutical care;
  • Be a valuable member of an interprofessional health-care team;
  • Identify and manage complex pharmacotherapy regimens
  • Cultivate ethical and evidence-based decision making
  • Promote public health; and
  • Meet the health-care challenges of the future.

Pharmacists are called upon continuously to develop knowledge and skills to assume new roles that focus on medication management, and to optimize patient outcomes. Graduates of the Idaho State University College of Pharmacy possess the knowledge and skills to succeed throughout their careers and hold true the values of professionalism, ethics, critical thinking, and life-long learning.

ISU's PharmD graduates are sought after for various career opportunities. New graduates have reported employment in community pharmacy practice, clinics and hospital practice, long-term care and home health care. Average full-time salaries associated with these positions for new graduates range from $100,000 to $140,000 annually.

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