Associate Professor Warren Rose’s atypical approach to overcoming antibiotic resistance receives more national recognition.

Associate Professor Warren Rose’s atypical approach to overcoming antibiotic resistance receives more national recognition.
As the field grows, alumni create programs and services to help patients with complex health conditions
The Pharmacy Society of Wisconsin recognizes Assistant Professor Ed Portillo as a state and national leader in pharmacist collaboration and education.
David Hager is the 2019 Young Alumnus of the Year, in recognition of his contributions as one of the state’s leaders in health-system and clinical pharmacy.
Brian Jensen is named the 2019 Alumnus of the Year by the School’s Pharmacy Alumni Association, recognizing his 39 years spent as a pioneer in pharmacy practice.
Through new strategic plan initiatives and an added leadership position, the School is enhancing efforts to educate inclusive pharmacists.
Alumna Julie Dagam is honored as a 2019 American Society of Health-System Pharmacists fellow, in recognition of contributions to pharmacy practice and her profession.
A survey of how 132 hospitals prescribed six new antibiotics from 2014 to 2018 found that the average time to prescribe any one of the new drugs was 398 days.
With a new R01 grant from the National Institutes of Health, Associate Professor Warren Rose is testing a MRSA subset that might not be as resistant to beta-lactams as previously thought.
In the second in a three-part series exploring how School of Pharmacy researchers are curbing the opioid epidemic, faculty are testing a new tool to improve appropriate prescribing and leveraging pharmacist expertise to increase naloxone dispensing.