The Johns Hopkins Hospital
The Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, MD
Last updated: 10/07/2025
Imran Qureshi
RPD since 2024
Primary Practice: The Johns Hospkins - Inpatient Psychiatry
RPD since 2024
Mailing address
The Johns Hopkins Hospital
Department of Pharmacy
600 N Wolfe St
Carnegie Bldg Room 180
Baltimore, MD 21287
United States
Primary Practice: The Johns Hospkins - Inpatient Psychiatry
1 PGY2 Psychiatry position
Phone:
4109557123
Email:
Web:
Maximum Number of Positions
- PGY1: 0
- PGY2 Psychiatry: 1
- PGY2 Neurology: 0
Program Details
- Institution type: University
- Primary Practice Site: University teaching hospital
- ASHP Accreditation Status: cand
- NMS Participant: Yes
- Program Inception: 2025
- PGY2 Required Practice Settings: 90% Inpatient / 10% Outpatient
- Preceptors: 2 BCPPs; 3 Other pharmacists
Application Details
- Starting Date: 07/01/2026
- Estimated Stipend: 60060
- Financial Support for AAPP Annual Meeting: Yes, full support
- Interviews Required: Yes
- Offers pre-commitment: Yes — Available to Johns Hopkins Health System PGY-1 resideints only.
Special Requirements for Application
- PharmD
- Completion of PGY1 Residency OR equivalent experience
- Eligible for state licensure
- Curriculum vitae
- Letters of recommendation (3)
PGY1 Rotations Offered
- Not applicable
PGY2 Rotations Offered
- Adult inpatient psychiatry
- Adult outpatient psychiatry
- Child and adolescent psychiatry
- Consultation liaison psychiatry
- Chronic/intermediate/extended inpatient psychiatry
- Emergency psychiatry
- Forensic psychiatry
- Geriatric psychiatry
- Neurology
- Pain management
- Specialty clinic
- Substance abuse
PGY2 Features
- Staffing Component: Yes, required
- Teaching Component: Yes, required
- Teaching Certificate Program: Yes, optional
- PGY2 Other Features: Preceptor opportunities for APPE students. Lecture at local SOP on psychiatric topic. Elective for State Hospital system.
Program Philosophy
The PGY-2 Psychiatry Pharmacy Residency aims to develop residents into high-achieving psychiatry pharmacists who can address complex patient and drug-related problems in the psychiatric patient setting. Residents who leave the program will act as advocates for a chronically undertreated patient population though professionalism and interdisciplinary cooperation.