(1) Training goals
This major mainly cultivates professionals who have basic knowledge, basic theories and basic skills in clinical pharmacy, and can engage in full-course pharmacy services centered on rational drug use.
(2) Professional requirements
Students in this major should have the clinical pharmacy service capabilities required for rational drug use, such as drug consultation, adverse drug reaction testing, and individualized drug delivery plan design; they should have comprehensive, systematic and accurate collection of patient information, standardize the skills to write drug records and conduct audits The ability to make prescriptions (doctor's orders), dispense prescriptions, and conduct medication guidance; have the ability to carry out drug (quality) management and drug utilization evaluation; and have the ability to educate patients and the public on basic drug knowledge and rational drug use.
Graduates should master the basic knowledge of pharmacy, medicine, chemistry, biology, and humanities and social sciences related to clinical pharmacy; be familiar with the basic knowledge and theories of the mechanism of disease, diagnostic criteria and clinical treatment methods; master the normal state of drugs in the human body and Basic knowledge and theories on pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamic laws and drug action mechanisms in disease states; master the basic knowledge and theories of clinical drug safety evaluation; master the basic knowledge and theories of clinical pharmacotherapy; master drugs Basic knowledge and theory of economics and relevant laws and policies of pharmaceutical management; ability to retrieve and read Chinese and foreign literature.
(1) Implement a flexible educational system. The basic academic system of this major is 5 years, and students can complete their studies in 4-8 years.
(2) Graduates who meet the requirements of the Degree Regulations will be awarded a Bachelor of Science degree.
The total graduation credits are 180 credits, including 96 credits for compulsory courses (38 credits for public basic platform courses, 23 credits for subject basic platform courses, and 35 credits for professional basic platform courses); 56 credits for elective courses (43 credits for major optional courses, and optional courses for majors 5 credits, 8 credits for public elective courses); 28 credits for practical teaching (including 7 credits for "special credits"). Students can graduate after completing all credits and passing the comprehensive graduation examination.
Subject basic platform courses: advanced mathematics, inorganic chemistry, medical physics, organic chemistry, physical chemistry, analytical chemistry, instrumental analysis, biochemistry and molecular biology.
Professional basic platform courses: class medicinal chemistry, pharmacology, pharmacology management, clinical pharmacology, clinical pharmacokinetics, pharmacy, pharmacotoxicology, adverse drug reactions, doctor-patient communication and skills, clinical pharmacotherapy (1) , Clinical pharmacotherapy (two), clinical pharmacotherapy (three).
Selected courses for majors: Human Anatomy, Literature Search, Physiology, Microbiology and Immunology, Medical Ethics, Pharmacognosy, Pathology and Pathophysiology, Drug Analysis, Pharmacoeconomics, Diagnostics, Pharmaceutical English, Introduction to Internal Medicine, Surgery Introduction, Introduction to Gynecology, Introduction to Pediatrics, Biopharmaceutics.