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**These positions are available in levels 1,2,or 3 depending on experience, education, and licenses/certifications**
Shift: 7a-7p
General Description:
The Inpatient Pharmacist I provides essential pharmacy services within the hospital setting to support safe, effective, and cost‑conscious medication use. The pharmacist performs medication order verification, sterile and non‑sterile compounding, dispensing, medication distribution, and foundational clinical support under established guidelines and policies. This role promotes patient safety, regulatory compliance, and timely coordination of pharmaceutical care while collaborating with interdisciplinary teams.
Essential Responsibilities:
Responsibilities listed in this section are core to the position. Inability to perform these responsibilities, with or without an accommodation, may result in disqualification from the position.
Shared Responsibilities:
Interpret, verify, and process medication orders for appropriateness, accuracy, dosing, and potential interactions.
Compound, prepare, and dispense medications in accordance with USP, state, and federal requirements.
Ensure safe and accurate preparation of sterile products, including IV admixtures.
Provide drug information and medication‑related support to nurses, providers, and other healthcare team members.
Participate in medication reconciliation and provide patient counseling when assigned.
Monitor drug distribution workflows to ensure accuracy, timeliness, and compliance with departmental standards.
Document interventions, clinical activities, and medication‑related events, including adverse drug reactions.
Support departmental quality, medication safety, and regulatory compliance initiatives.
Ensure adherence to pharmacy, hospital, state, and federal regulations and accreditation standards.
Participate in patient care rounds as appropriate to training and assignment.
Investigational Drug Studies (IDS) Pharmacist:
Serve as a pharmacy point‑of‑contact for investigational drug studies conducted within the organization.
Ensure investigational drug activities comply with FDA, DEA, IRB, USP, and institutional regulations and protocols.
Review study protocols for pharmacy impact, feasibility, and compliance requirements.
Coordinate proper receipt, labeling, storage, handling, and dispensing of investigational medications per study specifications.
Maintain detailed investigational drug accountability records including receipt, dispensing, returns, and destruction logs.
Conduct routine audits of investigational drug inventory and study documentation to ensure accuracy and compliance.
Support pharmacy operations during sponsor audits, monitoring visits, and regulatory inspections.
Participate in study start‑up meetings, site initiation visits, and communications with investigators and study sponsors.
Train pharmacy staff and residents on investigational drug procedures, documentation, and study‑specific requirements.
Assist with randomization and blinding procedures as applicable to study design.
Inpatient Pharmacist:
Perform daily operational pharmacy functions, including sterile and non‑sterile compounding, medication dispensing, and delivery.
Participate in medication distribution system oversight, including automated dispensing cabinet management and replenishment.
Adjust medication formulations and preparation techniques based on patient‑specific needs (e.g., pediatric dilutions, renal dose modifications under protocol).
Support nursing and provider teams by troubleshooting medication availability, substitutions, and therapeutic alternatives.
Assist with crash cart medication checks, emergency box replenishment, and management of high‑alert medications.
Contribute to routine quality checks, temperature monitoring, and inventory control for inpatient medication storage locations.
Provide discharge medication review and counseling to ensure safe transitions from the hospital to the next site of care.
General Responsibilities:
Performs other duties as assigned.
Minimum Qualifications (Level 1):
Education: Graduate of an ACPE-accredited College of Pharmacy with a Doctor of Pharmacy (PharmD) or Bachelor of Pharmacy (D.Ph.) degree required.
Experience: No experience required.
License(s)/Certification(s)/Registration(s) Required: Licensure as a Pharmacist by the Oklahoma State Board of Pharmacy required. Applicants without an active Oklahoma Pharmacist License must obtain licensure within 90 days of hire.
Minimum Qualifications (Level 2):
Education: Graduate of an ACPE-accredited College of Pharmacy with a Doctor of Pharmacy (PharmD) or Bachelor of Pharmacy (D.Ph.) degree required.
Experience: At least 3 years of experience as a licensed pharmacist.
License(s)/Certification(s)/Registration(s) Required: Licensure as a Pharmacist by the Oklahoma State Board of Pharmacy required. Applicants without an active Oklahoma Pharmacist License must obtain licensure within 90 days of hire. Preceptor certification through the Oklahoma State Board of Pharmacy required within 18 months of hire
Minimum Qualifications (Level 3):
Education: Graduate of an ACPE-accredited College of Pharmacy with a Doctor of Pharmacy (PharmD) or Bachelor of Pharmacy (D.Ph.) degree required.
Experience: At least 5 years of experience as a licensed pharmacist.
License(s)/Certification(s)/Registration(s) Required: Licensure as a Pharmacist by the Oklahoma State Board of Pharmacy required. Applicants without an active Oklahoma Pharmacist License must obtain licensure within 90 days of hire. Preceptor certification through the Oklahoma State Board of Pharmacy required within 18 months of hire
Knowledge, Skills and Abilities:
Foundational knowledge of inpatient pharmacy operations, medication preparation, and clinical practice principles.
Ability to identify and resolve basic medication‑related issues.
Understanding of regulatory and accreditation standards related to inpatient pharmacy services (USP, Joint Commission, state/federal requirements).
Strong communication, collaboration, and teamwork skills.
Ability to maintain accurate documentation and manage multiple tasks safely and efficiently.
Proficiency with pharmacy management systems, dispensing technologies, and electronic health records.
Commitment to patient‑centered care and medication safety.
Based on 400 disclosed Pharmacy salaries on RoleSuite, the role pays a median of $135K/year, with most offers between $128K and $155K (10th–90th percentile: $64K–$161K).
See the full Pharmacy salary breakdown →