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Katherine H. Chessman, PharmD, FPPA, FCCP, BCNSP
Distinguished Alumna
MUSC Medical Center's first full-time, hospital-based clinical pharmacy specialist working in the Division of Pediatric Surgery
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Katherine "Kathy" Hammond Chessman, PharmD, FPPA, FCCP, BCNSP, BCPS was born in Greenville, SC. Chessman graduated from Presbyterian College in Clinton, SC, Magna Cum Laude with a BS in Biology degree where she was a 3-year letterman in volleyball and basketball and was selected as the Presbyterian College Outstanding Young Alumnus in 1997. Chessman received both a BS in Pharmacy (1984) and a Doctor of Pharmacy degree (1986) from the MUSC College of Pharmacy, then completed a Pediatric Pharmacotherapy Residency with an emphasis in nutrition, pharmacokinetics, critical care, and research at the University of Tennessee, Memphis, and Le Bonheur Children’s Medical Center in Memphis, TN.
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After finishing her residency program, Chessman accepted a position as the MUSC Medical Center’s first, full-time, hospital-based clinical pharmacy specialist working in the Division of Pediatric Surgery. She is now Chair of the Department of Clinical Pharmacy and Outcome Sciences and Professor with tenure at the MUSC College of Pharmacy, a Clinical Pharmacist specializing in Pediatric Surgery/Pediatrics at the MUSC Medical Center Children’s Hospital, and previously served as the Residency Program Director of the MUSC Pediatric Pharmacy Residency Program for 27 years.
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At MUSC, Chessman served as President of the Faculty Senate and received one of the three inaugural university-wide MUSC Outstanding Clinician Awards (2000). She is board-certified in both nutrition support and pharmacotherapy, a charter member of the Phi Lambda Sigma Leadership Society Beta Chi Chapter, and a Fellow of the American College of Clinical Pharmacy (ACCP) and the Pediatric Pharmacy Advocacy Group. She served on and chaired the Board of Pharmaceutical Specialties (BPS) Nutrition Support Council and the BPS Pediatric Pharmacy Specialty Council.
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Chessman was the senior author on one of the first publications to describe using an ethanol lock to successfully reduce central line-related infections in children on home parenteral nutrition. She was also a member of the editorial boards of the ACCP’s Pharmacotherapy Self-Assessment Program 5th, 6th, and 7th Editions. She has authored several book chapters in the areas of fluids, electrolytes, nutrition, and various pediatric topics.
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She is married to Alec Chessman, MD, Professor of Family Medicine at MUSC. They have two children, Hannah and Zachary.