Compounding Trends in Equine Medicine

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accredited by the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education as a provider of ... as a preceptor for the University of
Saturday, April 23– 11:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.

Compounding Trends in Equine Medicine Dinah Jordan, BSPh, RPh, PharmD, FSVHP, DICVP, College of Veterinary Medicine, Mississippi State University By examining real case studies where compounds have improved equine patient care as well as cases where compounding was inappropriate, the participant will be better able to make sound professional judgments when handling compounding requests for equine patients. After this presentation, pharmacists and technicians will be able to: • Increase awareness of current compounding needs in equine medicine • Explain how to effectively compound equine preparations within current laws and regulations • Identify reliable resources for equine compounding • Examine equine cases demonstrating appropriate and inappropriate compounding

Dinah G. Jordan, BSPh, RPh, PharmD, FSVHP, DICVP Before her retirement in July 2015, Dr. Jordan was Chief of Pharmacy Services and Clinical Professor at the Mississippi State University College of Veterinary Medicine. She served as a preceptor for the University of Mississippi and University of Tennessee Schools of Pharmacy. She is specialty board certified in veterinary pharmacy as a Diplomate of the International College of Veterinary Pharmacists. After graduating from The University of Mississippi School of Pharmacy in 1972 with a Bachelor of Science in Pharmacy, she worked in both community and hospital practice before joining the veterinary college faculty. In 1998, she received her Doctor of Pharmacy from the University of Mississippi, graduating cum laude, and holds membership in Phi Kappa Phi, Phi Lambda Sigma, and Rho Chi honoraries. Dr. Jordan is a contributor to the Veterinary Drug Handbook, which is recognized as a leading drug information resource for practicing veterinarians. She co-authored an online veterinary pharmacy college credit course for pharmacy students, an online continuing education program for pharmacists and technicians, and developed standards for a veterinary pharmacy specialty board certification program for practicing pharmacists. She also co-authored a Veterinary Pharmacy chapter for the 22nd edition of Remington: The Science and Practice of Pharmacy. Dr. Jordan served as an advisor for the American Veterinary Medical Association Council on Biologics and Therapeutic Agents Subcommittee on Prescribing and Dispensing and on the U.S. Pharmacopeia Veterinary Information Expert Committee.

AMERICAN COLLEGE OF VETERINARY PHARMACISTS • vetmeds.org/vcc

The Veterinary Compounding Conference has been approved for 11 contact hours (1.1 CEUs) of continuing education credit. Attendees will be requested to provide their NABP e-Profile ID and birth date (MMDD) to receive credit for any ACPE-accredited CPE continuing education session and complete an evaluation form for each CE session. All sessions carrying the ACPE program number are approved for continuing education credit. The American College of Apothecaries, Inc. is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education as a provider of continuing pharmacy education.