19 – How This Pharmacist Learned the Ropes as a Foreign Grad And Became a Pharmacogenomics Specialist

On this week’s episode of Brown Skin Stories: Representing Women Pharmacists, I’m chatting it up with Dr. Otito Iwuchukwu, a licensed Pharmacist and an Assistant Professor of Pharmaceutical Sciences at Fairleigh Dickinson University’s (FDU) School of Pharmacy in New Jersey.

Dr. Otito earned her Doctor of Pharmacy from the University of Ibadan School of Pharmacy in Ibadan, Oyo State, located in Nigeria. She later earned her Ph.D. in Pharmaceutical Sciences from Temple University School of Pharmacy in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. After her doctoral studies, she completed an NIH Pharmacogenomics-focused fellowship in Clinical Pharmacology at Vanderbilt University.

Learn More Below to Access the Resources Discussed on this Episode

2 thoughts on “19 – How This Pharmacist Learned the Ropes as a Foreign Grad And Became a Pharmacogenomics Specialist

  1. Wow! What a depth of insight on pharmacogenonic from Dr Iwuchukwu.

    We need to get this research framework into Australian Pharmacy graduate program.

    Thanks Ijeoma for the great exposition from cerebral Otito.

Comments are closed.