Have you ever wanted to make your own gummy bears? Last month, pharmacy students from Mukogawa Women’s University (MWU) in Japan had the opportunity to do just that while visiting the Washington State University College of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences (CPPS).
SPOKANE, Wash. – What do a spy and a pharmacist have in common? This was one of the many questions Erica Liebelt, executive director and medical director of the Washington […]
Year-round, alumni, faculty and friends of the College of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences (CPPS) work tirelessly to innovate and advance the student pharmacist experience. Through regular meetings, generous contributions, and […]
YAKIMA, Wash. – College students in Yakima can now complete prerequisite courses for a Doctor of Pharmacy degree (PharmD) without leaving the area. WSU College of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences (CPPS), part of WSU […]
This summer Cardiff University pharmacy student Joseph Thomson spent five weeks more than 4,000 miles away from home. Thompson visited Spokane from July 1 through August 4 to participate in […]
FACULTY SCHOLARSHIP Publications Pharmacotherapy Clinical Associate Professor Kimberly McKeirnan, Allen I. White Distinguished Associate Professor Joshua Neumiller and Research Associate Andrew Yabusaki published the poster, “Extending the learning tree: 4th […]
On August 19, current and future scientists gathered to show off their work at the College of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences (CPPS) Research Day. The all-day event is a celebration […]
By Addy Hatch, WSU News A need to fill gaps in primary care is driving new approaches to health care workforce development in Washington, including at the WSU College of […]
“You need to remember you are not going on this journey by yourself, so I’m going to ask you to rely on yourself, each other and your networks.”
This is the advice that Interim Dean Linda Garrelts MacLean gave incoming student pharmacists at white coat ceremonies over the course of two days from August 15-16.
Darrell Jackson wants to train a new generation of healthcare practitioners in the Inland Northwest to help people with ALS and other neurodegenerative diseases live longer, healthier and happier lives.
An experienced educator who is nationally recognized for his work investigating the sometimes fatal after effects of strokes, Jackson is returning to WSU after spending nearly two decades away.