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Categories
All Faculty
Pharmacy Practice & Science Dept.
Location
Lee T. Todd, Jr. Bldg, Room 223
Phone
859-257-4760
Email
tracy.macaulay@uky.edu

Dr. Macaulay obtained her PharmD from the University of South Carolina. Subsequently, she completed a Post-Graduate Pharmacy Practice Residency at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, MN, and a Cardiology Specialty Residency at The Ohio State University Medical Center. In 2006, she joined UK HealthCare Pharmacy Services as a Clinical Pharmacy Specialist in CardiologyA short time later, she was appointed to the Department of Pharmacy Practice and Science at the UK College of Pharmacy and is now at the rank of Clinical Professor. Over the past seventeen years with UKHealthCare Pharmacy Services, she has held several leadership roles, growing cardiovascular pharmacy services, directing transitions of care and ambulatory clinical programming, and establishing a credentialing and privileging process for Clinician Pharmacists. She remains a clinical pharmacist for Pharmacy Services and the Gill Heart and Vascular Institute. Dr. Macaulay engages in teaching pharmacy students and residents as well as medical students, residents, and CV fellows in both didactic and clinical settings. Her most recent adventure is as co-host of the CardioScripts Podcast.

PUBLICATIONS

Expertise

  • Pharmacy Practice
  • Cardiovascular Pharmacy

Positions

  • College Faculty
  • Clinical Pharmacist, UK Healthcare Gill Heart and Vascular Institute

Education

  • Doctor of Pharmacy, University of South Carolina
  • PGY1 Pharmacy Practice Residency, The Mayo Clinic
  • PGY2 Pharmacy Practice Residency in Cardiology, The Ohio State University

We wish to remember and honor those who inhabited this Commonwealth before the arrival of the Europeans. Briefly occupying these lands were the Osage, Wyndott tribe, and Miami peoples. The Adena and Hopewell peoples, who are recognized by the naming of the time period in which they resided here, were here more permanently. Some of their mounds remain in the Lexington area, including at UK’s Adena Park.

In more recent years, the Cherokee occupied southeast Kentucky, the Yuchi southwest Kentucky, the Chickasaw extreme western Kentucky and the Shawnee central Kentucky including what is now the city of Lexington. The Shawnee left when colonization pushed through the Appalachian Mountains. Lower Shawnee Town ceremonial grounds are still visible in Greenup County.

We honor the first inhabitants who were here, respect their culture, and acknowledge the presence of their descendants who are here today in all walks of life including fellow pharmacists and healthcare professionals.