Campus Construction Update

The Menino building lobby entrance is currently closed. This, along with the ongoing Yawkey building entrance closure, will help us bring you an even better campus experience that matches the exceptional care you've come to expect. Please enter the Menino and Yawkey buildings through the Moakley building, and make sure to leave extra time to get to your appointment. Thank you for your patience. 

Click here to learn more about our campus redesign. 

Program Director Contact Information

Jessica Corrio

Jessica Corio, PharmD, BCPS, BCEMP
Clinical Specialist – Emergency Medicine
Director – PGY2 Emergency Medicine

 

 

 

 

 

Brian Gendron

Bryan Gendron, PharmD, BCPS, BCEMP
Clinical Coordinator - Emergency Medicine
Coordinator – PGY2 Emergency Medicine

 

 

 

 

We will be having in-person interviews for the 2025-2026 recruitment cycle. 

For general residency questions, please email jessica.corio@bmc.org or bryan.gendron@bmc.org.

 

Use this link to sign-up for a PPS interview during the ASHP Midyear Clinical Meeting (December 8-12, 2024). If you are not taking part in PPS, please reach out to our PGY2 program directly (see contact information above) if you are interested in setting up an introduction session.

 

Program Description

The Boston Medical Center PGY2 Emergency Medicine pharmacy residency is among the oldest programs accredited through ASHP. This program offers specialized training in emergency medicine pharmacotherapy in one of the busiest emergency departments in the United States and largest level 1 trauma center in the Northeast region. After orientation to the department, the resident begins a series of rotations and other activities designed to meet the goals and objectives of the PGY2 residency in emergency medicine. Rotation options include adult emergency medicine (I-IV), emergency department administration, pediatric emergency medicine & pediatric intensive care, medical intensive care, trauma intensive care, and toxicology. Longitudinal activities include completion of a research/quality improvement project, participation in the institution’s code blue committee, medication guideline development, and multidisciplinary teaching opportunities. In addition, the resident will complete independent staffing shifts in the emergency department to further develop the clinical and operational skillset to become an effective emergency medicine pharmacy specialist upon completion of the program.

Learn more about Boston Medical Center's Emergency Medicine Services

Learn more about Boston Medical Center's Critical Care Medicine Services

Program Purpose

PGY2 pharmacy residency programs build on Doctor of Pharmacy (PharmD) education and PGY1 pharmacy residency programs to contribute to the development of clinical pharmacists in specialized areas of practice. PGY2 residencies provide residents with opportunities to function independently as practitioners by conceptualizing and integrating accumulated experience and knowledge and incorporating both into the provision of patient care or other advanced practice settings. Residents who successfully complete an accredited PGY2 pharmacy residency are prepared for advanced patient care, academic, or other specialized positions, along with board certification.

Program Outcomes

  1. Patient care
  2. Advancing practice and improving patient care
  3. Leadership and management
  4. Teaching, education, and dissemination of knowledge
  5. Management of medical emergencies
  6. Management of toxicology patients

Core Rotations (4 weeks unless otherwise specified)

  • Orientation
  • Emergency Medicine I 
    • May include co-precepting an APPE student
  • Emergency Medicine II
    • May include co-precepting an APPE student and/or PGY1 resident
  • Emergency Medicine III- Evenings
    • May include co-precepting an APPE student and/or PGY1 resident
  • Emergency Medicine - Precepting
    • Co-precepting a PGY1 resident or APPE student
  • Emergency Medicine- Overnight (1 week x2)
  • Pediatric Emergency Medicine & Pediatric ICU 
  • Toxicology 
  • Emergency Department Administration 
  • Emergency Medical Services (1 week)
  • Trauma ICU 
  • Medical ICU 

Elective Rotations (4 Weeks - Choice of 1)

  • Infectious Diseases-Consult Service
  • Cardiac ICU
  • Addiction Medicine Consult Service
  • Neurocritical Care

Longitudinal Responsibilities

  • Longitudinal research or IHI quality improvement project supported by the scholarship committee
    • Receive an IHI Basic Certificate in Quality and Safety
    • Final manuscript submission
  • Medication safety
  • Medication guideline development or revisions
  • Information systems support (e.g. CPOE, smartpump, ADC, Lexi-Comp) improvements
  • Medication Use Evaluations (MUE)
  • Pharmacy and Therapeutics committee participation
  • Completion of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement basic certificate in quality and safety
  • Participation in emergency responses (e.g. code blue, code stroke, rapid response, and trauma room care)
  • Code Committee participation

Teaching Responsibilities

  • 1 resident case conference or pharmacy M&M conference
  • 1 case conference as preceptor to PGY1 resident
  • 1 ACPE-Accredited Continuing Education (CE) lecture
  • 3 In-services to nurses, physicians, and/or pharmacists
  • 1 Emergency Medicine conference lecture (Grand Rounds)
  • 1 clinical pearl presentation at the New England Critical Care Symposium (5 minutes)
  • Journal club presentations
  • Code blue simulation participation
  • Co-precepting APPE students & PGY1 residents on rotation

Additional Opportunities

  • Resident Teaching Certificate
  • Resiliency Training
  • Development or revisions of monographs, policies, or guidelines
  • Code blue simulation participation 
  • American Academy of Clinical Pharmacy ED PRN online journal club (30 minutes, if selected)
  • Chief Resident opportunity

Pharmacy Practice (Staffing) Responsibilities

  • ED evening staffing (8 hour shifts) four weeks throughout the year
  • ED shift staffing during core EM rotations (residents may participate in ICU independent staffing shifts if interested), not to exceed 20% of the learning experience
  • Every third weekend staffing (8 hour shifts) of an ED shift (AM or PM)
  • Holiday assignments
    • 1 major (Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, New Year's Eve, New Year's Day)
    • 1 minor (Memorial Day, Labor Day, Martin Luther King Day)

Benefits

  • Estimated Salary: $63,000
  • Vacation time: 12 days
  • Office space with computer
  • Travel/CE allowance (~$2,600/year): ASHP Midyear Meeting, SCCM, or other opportunities for additional national specialty meetings (e.g. North American Congress of Clinical Toxicology, American College of Emergency Physicians, Society of Academic Emergency Medicine, or American College of Medical Toxicology)
  • $750 cafeteria allowance per academic year
  • $1000 move/licensure bonus
  • Lease guarantee available to minimize security deposit requirements
  • Insurance Benefits: health (100% employer-paid option), dental, vision, disability, accidental death and dismemberment, life insurance