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Re: School of Pharmacy's Deanship

Dear van Mil

Ok. I understand your message. Can you tell me: we graduate in B.S.Pharm or
Pharm.D after complete 5 years of pharmacy entry level graduation? Our
course is semestral with 9 semester in integral period (8:00 am ~ 6:00 pm).
We get a grade in Pharmacist and Biochemistry and after registration in
Regional Pharmaceutical Council, that will give us a license to practice
pharmacy we get a title before the name: doctor.
In five years our course is divided in basic (3 years) and professional core
(2 years).

Basic Core: Mathematics, Basic and Inorganic Chemistry, Introduction in
Pharmaceutical Sciences, First Aid, Introduction in Physical Measures to
Pharmacy, Statistics, Organic Chemistry I, Physical Chemistry VI, Inorganic
Chemistry, Physics I, Organic Chemistry II, Experimental Organic Chemistry
VII, Qualitative Analytical Chemistry III, Human Anatomy I, Citology
Histology and Embriology I, Fisiology and Biophysics I, Biochemistry:
biomolecular structure and metabolism, Experimental Biochemistry, Human
Anatomy II, Citology Histology and Embriology II, Fisiology and biophysics
II, Quantitative Analytical Chemistry VI, Microbiology, Parasitology,
Immunology, Instrumental Analytical Chemistry II, Bromatology, Biochemistry
and molecular biology, Pathology, Pharmacodinamics, Medicinal Chemistry,
Heterocyclic Compounds, Biopharmacognosis and pharmaceutical coumpounding.

Professional core is divided in 3 major area: Pharmaceuticals, Diagnostics
and Food.

Pharmaceuticals: Industrial Physics, Toxicology I, Physics II, Public Health
to pharmacists, Pharmaceuticals Coumpounding, Nuclear Pharmacy, Deontology
and Law, Economy and Administration, Technology in Fermentation,
Pharmacotherapy, Cosmetology, Industrial Pharmaceutical Coumpounding, Human
Genetics, Industrial Enzimology II, Production Supervisor,
Chemical-Pharmaceutical Technology, Quality Controls methods
(physical-chemistry and microbiology), Hospitalar Pharmacy and Technology in
Vaccines and Serum.

Diagostics: Nuclear Pharmacy, Toxicology I, Public Health, Clinical
Immunology, Medical Chemistry, Deontology and Law, Hematology, Clinical
Citology, Human Genetics, Economy and Administration, Toxicology II,
Clinical Microbiology, Quality Control in Medical Diagnosis (Pathology),
Micology and Parasitology and Pharmaceutical Coumpounding.

Food: Toxicology I, Industrial Physics, Technology in Vaccines and Serum,
Public Health, Physics II, Nuclear Pharmacy, Deontology and Law,
Microbiological Analysis in Food, Fermentation Technology in Food, Food
Analysis, Food Chemistry and Biochemistry, Human Genetics, Industrial
Enzimology II, Food Government Control, Technology in Food, Quality Control
in Food, Human Nutrition and Fish.

So, I'm confusing about our trends in Pharmaceutical Education in my
country.

David I Kasahara


-----Mensagem original-----
De: J.W.F. van Mil <jwfvmil@wxs.nl>
Para: PharmCare <PharmCare@pharmweb1.man.ac.uk>
Data: Wednesday, June 28, 2000 5:07 PM
Assunto: Re: School of Pharmacy's Deanship


>Hi all,
>
>It seems like we have much more differentiation than we
>anticipated between countries..
>
>To answer david from Sao Paulo: in some countries the a
>pharmacist is someone who completed a pharmaceutical
>education at university, and additionally did an exam for a
>pharmacist license. So basically any pharmacist is then a
>pharmaceutical scientist (having a masters, or equivalent in
>pharmacy). But not every pharmaceutical scientist is a pharmacist,
>because they still need to acquire a license (or pharmacist
>diplome)..
>
>Now, whether universities prepare their students as a
>pharmaceutical scientist is another story, and depends very much
>on the quality and length of the university education. In some
>countries the schools of pharmacy have their curriculum totally
>oriented towards 'producing' pharmacists. In other countries there
>might be a differentiation in the university education, one leading to
>a pharmaceutical scientist and the other towards being a
>pharmacist, depending on the topics chosen during the curriculum..
>
>Lastly, the length of the education does not tell you very much
>about the qualification. This depends also on the entry level, with
>which the students enter university. In some countries students get
>into university at 16, after an average secondary school system, in
>other they enter when they are 19 or 20 after having gone through
>an additional college..
>
>
>Foppe
>
>>   Hi
>>
>>   What is difference between pharmacist and pharmaceutical scientist? In
>>   my country, precisally in my State, we have near 10 schools of
>>   pharmacy, 3 is public and other schools are private. All public
>>   pharmacy school have a dean that is graduate in pharmaceutical Science
>>   and had an Ph.D. in any area and have successfully completed their
>>   "livre-docência" in pharmacy. And so, after become an full professor,
>>   he is elegible to become a dean in any public pharmacy School..
>>
>>   David I Kasahara, B.S.Pharm..
>>   MSc Student at School of Medicine - University of Sao Paulo
>>
>>   -----Mensagem original-----
>>   De: Billy Futter <B.Futter@ru.ac.za>
>>   Para: PharmCare <PharmCare@pharmweb1.man.ac.uk>
>>   Data: Tuesday, June 20, 2000 8:13 AM
>>   Assunto: Re: School of Pharmacy's Deanship
>>
>>
>>   >Hi Dzul
>>   >We have 9 universities offering partial of complete training for
>>   >entry level pharmacist courses, nearly all of whom have a background
>>   >in pharmaceutics.  A few have changed emphasis towards pharmacy
>>   >practice, or drug policy.  With the emphasis in the is moving away
>>   >manufacturing towards more clinical competencies, it is interesting
>>   >to speculate on the role played by the key discipline of the head in
>>   >resisting or facilitating this change...
>>   >
>>   >It is also interesting to consider the role that a non-pharmacist
>>   >might play in facilitating or resisting this change.  Would it be
>>   >fair to say that if the head was from the pure sciences, that there
>>   >would be a greater propensity to hang onto traditional competencies?
>>   >(PS I am a social scientist so I am more interested in putting the
>>   >care into pharmaceutical care than the pharmaceuticals!)
>>   >
>>   >Cheers
>>   >Billy
>>   >
>>   >Billy Futter
>>   >Associate Professor
>>   >Faculty of Pharmacy
>>   >Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa
>>   >email B.Futter@ru.ac.za
>>   >phone 046 603 8494
>>   >fax  046 636 1205
>>   >
>>   >
>>   >
>>   >
>>
>
>
>*****************************************************************
>   Foppe van Mil, PhD, Pharm D. Pharmacy practice consultant
>    Margrietlaan 1, NL 9471 CT Zuidlaren, The Netherlands
>Tel: +31 50 4094333. Fax +31 50 4090732. Email: jwfvmil@wxs.nl
>*****************************************************************
>   Attachments may arrive after this message as separate mail
>
>
>
>


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