Clinical Program Courses - PharmD
PP 501 - Community Pharmacy Practice (2+1)
This course includes the study of the clinical situations that can be
handled by the pharmacist in the community pharmacy (referral or
using OTC medications) including upper respiratory tract,
gastrointestinal, and musculosketal symptoms, skin, eyes, and ears,
and childhood symptoms.
PP 602 - Hospital Pharmacy (2+1)
Organization and structure of a hospital pharmacy, hospital pharmacy
facilities and services (inpatient and outpatient services), transfer of
care, patient’s medication record, and rational medication use, hospital
formulary, pharmacy and therapeutic committee, I.V. admixtures and
incompatibilities, parenteral nutrition, handling of cytotoxic drugs,
therapeutic drug monitoring, patient counselling and safety, and risk
management
PP 603 - Clinical Pharmacy Practice (2+1)
This course includes the definition and concepts of clinical pharmacy
and pharmaceutical care, case history and case presentation,
medication history taking, clinical problem solving, and therapeutic
planning, clinical rounding and assessment of patient compliance.
Principles of special care populations (geriatric, pediatric, pregnancy,
and lactation). Drug-related problems and drug interactions .
Interpretation of clinical laboratory data and physical examination.
PP 704 - Drug information (1+1)
This course includes an advanced application of the science of drug
information in terms of: its practice within the drug information
centers and various clinical sites. The course will focus on Drug
information and poison information centers, different drug information
resources, use of the internet for drug and research information,
evaluating information on the web. The classification of study design
and clinical trials, data presentation, and basic statistical concepts are
detailed. Basics of pharmacoeconomic literature are described.
PP 805 - Management of endocrine & renal diseases (1+1)
This course includes the Pathophysiology, causes, clinical
presentation, diagnosis and application of pharmaceutical care plans in
different endocrinologic disorders (Diabetes, thyroid disorder,
caushing syndrome,...) and different renal disorders and related fluid
and electrolyte disturbances (acute and chronic renal failure, uremic
syndrome, kidney stones, ..). The course develops the students’ ability
to design, monitor, refine safe and cost-effective treatment plans and
provide appropriate information to patient, caregivers, and health
professionals.
PP 806 - Management of oncological diseases and radio
pharmacy (2+1)
Cancer aetiology, risk factors, cancer staging and grading, diagnosis,
prognosis, optimizing chemotherapeutic regimens, different types of
tumours (solid and hematologic) and their management, toxicities of
chemotherapy, supportive treatment, pharmaceutical care and patient's
support measures. This course also includes studying radioactive isotopes
which process medical applications and precautions of their usage.
PP 807 - Clinical Pharmacokinetics (2+1)
Introduction to clinical pharmacokinetics and its applications,
pharmacokinetics, non-compartmental pharmacokinetics and moment
analysis. Drug distribution and drug clearance mechanisms, IV
infusion kinetics and kinetics following extra-vascular dosing,
metabolite kinetics, multiple dose kinetics, non-linear
pharmacokinetics, dosage regimen design, dosage individualization of
drugs of narrow therapeutic index especially in patients with
compromised renal and hepatic function.
PP 908 - Management of neuropsychiatry diseases (1+1)
This course aims to provide the student with the knowledge in,
pathophysiology, clinical interpretation, pharmacotherapy and
management of neuropsychiatric diseases (e. .g mental health
disorders, schizophrenia, depression, anxiety, seizure disorders,
parkinsonism, migraines, dementia and Alzheimer's disease). Sedative
and hypnotics, general anesthetics, opioid analgesics and non steroidal
anti-inflammatory drugs.
PP 909 - Clinical Nutrition (1+1)
Measures of healthy life-style – Macronutrients and calculation of
calories – Basal metabolic rate (BMR) - Rcommended daily
allowance (RDA) – Nutritional requirement for pediatrics and
geriatrics - Vitamins and minerals (role in metabolism – clinical
significance) – Gut microbiota and human health – Enteral and
parenteral nutrition - Dietary care for patients with obesity, diabetes
mellitus, cardiovascular, renal and hepatic disorders – Dietary care for
cancer patients - Dietary care for sports` men - Dietary care for
pregnant and lactating women – Nutrigenomics.
PP 010 - Management of critical care patients (1+1)
This course aims to provide the student with the knowledge in, pathophysiology,
clinical interpretation, pharmacotherapy and management of critical care illness
(e.g. medical and surgical crises, trauma patients, supportive care, ICU infections,
burns, neuro-critical care, cardiovascular critical care, sepsis, septic shock, pain
and analgesia, bleeding disorders and anticoagulation, nutritional support and
therapy, hemodynamic monitoring, fluid and electrolyte disorders).
PP 011 - Management of dermatological, reproductive and
musculoskeletal diseases (2+1)
Skin structure and function, primary and secondary lesions. Most
popular skin diseases: infective and non-infective types and their
differentiation. Sexually transmitted diseases, male infertility, and
women health. Musculoskeletal disorders are also included.
PP 012 - Management of Pediatric diseases (2+1)
Nutritional requirements in neonates and infants, nutritional disorders,
neonatology, infectious diseases in pediatrics, congenital heart
diseases, endocrine, neurological, haematologic, renal, and respiratory
disorders, pediatric emergencies.
PP 013 - Management of Cardiovascular diseases (2+1)
Main diseases affecting the cardiovascular system, symptoms,
prognosis, pharmacological and non-pharmacological management,
patient counseling and monitoring of dyslipidaemias, hypertension,
coronary artery disease, acute coronary syndromes, heart failure,
dysrhythmias, thromboembolic disorders, and stroke.
PP 014 - Management of Gastrointestinal diseases (2+1)
Hepatic disorders including viral hepatitis, pancreatitis,
gastrointestinal bleeding, peptic ulcer, gastro-esophageal reflux
disease, inflammatory bowel diseases and irritable bowel syndrome as
well as gastrointestinal symptoms including nausea, vomiting,
constipation, and diarrhea.
PP 015 - Management of Respiratory diseases (1+1)
Epidemiology, aetiology, pathophysiology, clinical manifestation,
investigations, treatment, monitoring, and patient counseling of
bronchial asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, pulmonary
hypertension, cystic fibrosis, upper and lower respiratory tract
infections, and drug-induced respiratory problems.
PP 016 - Clinical Research and Pharmacovigilance (1+0)
This course introduces the student to the basic principles of clinical
research, design of research studies, types of research studies, clinical
trials, statistical presentation of research data and ethical guidelines in
drug research. This course also provides the student's with
understanding of pharmacovigilance importance, concept,
processes, systems, global safety standards and regulations and
reporting systems.
PP E17 - Geriatric pharmacotherapy (1+1)
Geriatric Therapeutics is designed to prepare the student to provide
pharmaceutical care to the elderly patient. The course is composed of
3 sections covering general principles of aging and geriatric assessment
skills, followed by the pharmacotherapy of selected disease states and
syndromes common to the senior population and ending with geriatric
& consultant pharmacy practice. At completion of this course, the
successful student will be able to:
1. Describe the biology of aging
and discuss common theories of aging.
2. Perform selected aspects
of physical and psychiatric assessment utilizing tools developed for the
geriatric patient to identify those with the highest risk for medicationrelated problems.
3. Effectively communicate with elderly
patients using appropriate sources of patient education information.
4.
Describe drug regimen review and regulations involving consultantpharmacy practice.
5. Evaluate therapeutic decisions and preventive
care given a patient’s life expectancy and available evidence for
benefit.
PP E18 - Interprofessional skills (1+1)
By the end of this course students will be able to:
1) Describe the
philosophy of interprofessional practice;
2) Describe the role of other
professionals and their roles and responsibilities in patient care and in
the health of populations;
3) Explore methods of interprofessional
collaboration with others;
4) Appreciate the relevance and impact of
ethics in interprofessional practice;
5) Apply appropriate
communication skills with team members, patients and individuals
involved in patient care or health promotion.
PP E19 - Pharmacoeconomics (1+1)
The purpose of this course is to introduce students to the fundamental
methods ofpharmacoeconomic analysis. Topics include the
terminology used in pharmacoeconomics, research methods frequently
used in pharmacoeconomics, and the role of pharmacoeconomics in
the drug development process and health care decision making
relevant to the practice of pharmacy, cost/benefit assessment, public
health systems, health insurance, tax-based systems. These principles
will prepare the student for future coursework where the student will
develop and implement individualized treatment plans, taking into
consideration pharmacoeconomics factors.