LECOM Bradenton School of Pharmacy
Introduction to Pharmacy - 2 Credit
Hours
The student will be introduced to the profession. This course will cover the
history of the pharmacy profession, the pharmaceutical care concepts, medical terminology, the
delivery of Pharmaceutical care and the driving force, which lead the direction of the profession.
Team learning and team dynamics will be emphasized as well as communication skills.
Introduction to Health Care Delivery - 1 Credit Hour
An
overview of the basic structures and operations of the U.S. health care delivery system, including
its historical origins; the changing roles of the components of the system; and the technical,
economic, political and social forces responsible for these changes will be covered. Students will
gain an understanding of how pharmacy practice evolved in the health care delivery system. Service
learning will be initiated in this course.
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
- 5 Credit Hours
This course provides the molecular basis for
important physiological processes and disease states and emphasizes that specific biological
molecules are the specific targets of drug action. This course will focus on three broad areas: (1)
modern concepts of protein structure and function, (2) traditional intermediary metabolism
emphasizing relationships to disease states such as diabetes and hyperlipidemia, and (3) modern
concepts of molecular biology and genomics. This course will provide the pharmacy student the basic
scientific insight to how new drugs are rationally designed, and then rationally chosen for use in
individual patients.
Pharmaceutics I w/ lab - 4 Credit
Hours
This two-part sequence is the study and application of the physical-chemical
and mathematical principles important for the design, formulation, and effective use of dosage
forms to assure product performance and achieve the desired therapeutic outcomes. The lab will
emphasize practical concepts of drug physical and chemical properties as related to quantitative
analysis, formulation, and stability of various drug dosage forms.
Microbiology w/lab - 4 Credit Hours
This course is an
introduction to basic concepts of medical microbiology with special focus on pathogenic
microorganisms and the rational use of antibiotic drugs. Molecular mechanisms of pathogenesis,
virulence, and susceptibility to antibiotic therapy will be emphasized, as will development and
transmission of resistance to antibiotics. A portion of the course will be devoted to the role of
the immune system in protecting against infections disease, as well as basic understanding of
immunologic disorders such as HIV-AIDS.
Pharmaceutical Calculations - 1
Credit Hour
This course introduces pharmacy students to the
mathematical analysis and computations needed for basic dosage preparations and formulation
essential to the practice of pharmacy.
Physiology & Anatomy w/lab - 4
Credit Hours
This course will relate anatomical structure of cells,
tissues and organ systems to physiological functions and homeostasis. Attention also will focus on
etiology, and clinical consequences of abnormal physiological function. Special emphasis will be
given to the molecular basis of physiological function as the target of pharmacotherapeutic
intervention.
Pharmacist Provided Care - 2 Credit
Hours
The delivery of pharmacist provided care will be examined from the perspective
of different types of services in various settings. Topics will include an introduction to
pharmaceutical care, communication skills, team building, leadership, professionalism and
compassion/empathy. This course will allow students to experience, at an early stage of training,
real life issues affecting patients through the continuation of service learning in an off-campus
setting.
Pharmaceutics II w/lab - 4 Credit
Hours
This second course in this series provides students with a qualitative and
quantitative overview of drug disposition and the processes important to disposition, namely,
absorption, distribution, metabolism and excretion. Sterile dosage forms will also be introduced
teaching the organization and administration of an admixture program and admixture techniques. The
proper utilization of parenteral products, as well as parenteral drug compatibility literature is
also considered. Several laboratory sessions will be devoted to sterile dosage forms.
Pharmacy Law and Ethics - 2 Credit Hours
This course will
examine the laws, regulations and related ethical issues regarding the practice of pharmacy and the
regulation and control of drugs, cosmetics, and medical devices.
Drug
Information - 2 Credit Hours
The structure of a drug information
center as well as the role and functions of a drug information pharmacist will be reviewed. The
students will be familiarized with the skills required to handle different types of drug
information questions. Technology will be fully utilized.
Communication and
Counseling w/lab - 1 Credit Hour
This course is designed to provide
students with an opportunity to learn, observe, apply and receive feedback on effective
communication skills and techniques. It will build on the medication counseling information
students learn in Introduction to Pharmacy. Students will be instructed on important principles
required to develop positive relationships and promote positive therapeutic outcomes: engage,
empathize, educate and enlist.
Intermediate Pharmacy Practice Experience - 8
Credit Hours
The students will practice as a pharmacy extern
(experiential student) four weeks each in a community setting and an institutional setting. They
will learn details which involve the distribution of a drug from the prescription received to the
safe administration of the drug to the right patient.
Biopharmaceutics - 3
Credit Hours
Students will learn how to calculate various
pharmacokinetic parameters that are important to the therapeutic use of drugs. By understanding and
calculating the impact of various factors on drug disposition, students will develop an
understanding of how therapeutic dosing may be modified.
Pharmacology/Medicinal Chemistry I - 3 Credit Hours
This
course emphasizes the basic scientific principles that describe the interaction of drug molecules
with biological systems and provides the fundamentals of rational drug therapy. The structural
forces that control drug receptor interactions are reviewed from a structure-activity perspective.
The physical-chemical properties of functional groups in drug molecules are related to absorption,
distribution, metabolism and excretion.
Research methods &
Pharmacoepidemiology - 2 Credit Hours
The students will be
familiarized with statistical designs and their applications in different modalities of studies.
The students will also learn the principles of pharmacoepidemiology and its applications to the
practice of Pharmacy and Clinical Sciences.
Clinical Pharmacokinetics - 3
Credit Hours
The course will apply the basic concepts of
Biopharmaceutics to the clinical management of various patients’ conditions. The goal is to
optimize therapy, achieve maximum efficacy while preserving safety for the patients.
Pharmacology/Medicinal Chemistry II - 4 Credit Hours
A
continuation of Pharmacology/Medicinal Chemistry I. This course will familiarize students with
various classes of drugs used to treat cardiovascular, gastrointestinal and inflammatory disease.
Drugs that act on blood and blood-forming organs will also be discussed. Mechanisms of action,
toxicity profiles, chemistry and quantitative structural activity relationships, and
pharmacokinetics associated with the different drugs will be emphasized.
Clinical Laboratory & Physical Assessment - 2 Credit Hours
The students will learn the basics in physical assessment and monitoring the effects of drugs in
patients. The clinical laboratory component will cover the normal and abnormal laboratory values
from different organ systems. This course will prepare the students for upcoming courses in
pathophysiology and therapeutics.
Pharmacy Practice Management - 2
Credit Hours
Emphasis is given to the managerial aspects of
pharmacy practice within the health care system. This course provides the basic financial and
operational management knowledge and skills necessary for successful professional practice in any
venue.
Pharmacotherapeutics I – III - 15 Credit
Hours
This course will cover pathophysiology and therapeutics per organ systems. It
will start with the non-prescription drugs and medical devices, dermatology and follow by the series
of theses organ systems: respiratory, cardiovascular, degenerating diseases, genital urologic
diseases, endocrinology/gastro-intestinal diseases, critical care, infectious diseases, neurology,
psychiatry, oncology, and women’s health. The courses of Pharmacotherapeutics will be taught
in a sequential and integrative manner to tie in the knowledge and concepts from Medicinal chemistry
coupled with the Pharmacology of the drugs involved in the corresponding organ system and to the
pathophysiology and therapeutic principles in clinical practice. This will enable the students to
relate the knowledge from both basic sciences and clinical sciences.
Alternative Medicine - 2 Credit Hours
This course covers different
aspects of natural products used as pharmaceuticals, including both plant derived and
microbial-derived (antibiotics) products. In addition, this course will introduce the students to
other aspects of medical care such as alternative medical therapies used in the US and will study
the potential drug interactions, adverse effects, and usage in the clinical arena.
Pharmacology/Medicinal Chemistry III - Credit Hours
A
continuation of Pharmacology/Medicinal Chemistry II. This course will familiarize students with
antibiotics, chemotherapeutic agents, and drugs used to treat disorders of the endocrine system.
Mechanisms of action, toxicity profiles, chemistry and quantitative structural activity
relationships, and the pharmacokinetics associated with the different drugs will be emphasized.
Pharmacogenomics - 2 Credit Hours
This course
provides students with an understanding of the ways that inherited variations in genes affects
response to drugs, and how an understanding of these variations can be used to predict response.
The course will provide an overview of the principles of genetic medicine and bioinformatics, and
consider ethical, legal and social issues in genomics. The impact of genetics on drug metabolism,
and drug transporters will be discussed as well as the role of pharmacogenomics in drug discovery
and development. The role that pharmacogenomics plays in treatment of specific diseases will
complete the course.
Drug Literature Evaluation - 2 Credit
Hours
Students will read and critically evaluate current topics in the medical and
scientific literature with a focus on landmark clinical trials. They will learn how to critique
scientific literature to determine bias and understand the clinical benefits presented in each
article discussed.
PharmD Seminar - 2 Credit
Hours
Students will be expected to research a therapeutic or controversial medical
topic to be presented as a platform session to their peers and members of the faculty. Research
preparation will take place during the fall semester and presentation will take place during the
spring semester.
Pharmacoeconomics & Outcomes Assessment - 3
Credit Hours
Students are introduced to the principles and tools of
pharmacoeconomics and outcomes assessment that are commonly used to study the impact of
pharmaceutical care services on the health and health care of a patient or community.
Public Health - 2 Credit Hours
Students will discuss the
impact of disease on society, and mechanisms that can be put in place to prevent disease,
morbidity, and mortality. Government involvement in patient care and models used in other
countries will also be discussed.
COURSE ELECTIVES
Research Independent Study - 2-3 Credit Hours
This
Research Elective course provides professional pharmacy students with independent experiential
opportunities in laboratory, clinic and/or literature research in the field of Pharmaceutical
Sciences and Pharmacy Practice. This course is planned, individualized and coordinated by the
Faculty/Mentor for the specific research activity performed by the Student. It utilizes the
expertise of the Faculty in their respective fields of specialization and/or interests and affords
the student the opportunity to learn about contemporary and interdisciplinary areas in the
Pharmaceutical Sciences and Pharmacy Practice.
Additional Electives to be Developed
during the 2007-2008 Academic Year.