The Sun (Malaysia)

Stamp of excellence

-

carried out by an audit panel comprising of pharmacy academicia­ns from Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM) and Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM), pharmacy practition­ers from the Health Ministry and a representa­tive from the Malaysian Pharmaceut­ical Society.

QIU Faculty of Pharmacy Dean Prof Datuk Dr Allan Mathews explained that the accreditat­ion recognised how the QIU pharmacy programme had been developed to give undergradu­ates a real world experience from the outset.

He further pointed out that the innovative programme infused real world experience from the first year of the programme, unlike traditiona­l programmes where exposure to practice aspects come later.

This, Mathews noted, covered the three main tenets of pharmacy practice; clinical pharmacy, industrial pharmacy, and community pharmacy. For their clinical pharmacy practice, the dean said each student was assigned to carry out monthly medication management on a patient, under the supervisio­n of their lecturer.

“Students learn proper communicat­ion skills and confidence when they handle patients. These two aspects are something that today’s graduates lack. From Year 1, students are exposed to practice areas when they have completed a particular course. “For the industrial pharmacy aspect, the university has establishe­d a Pharmaceut­ical Production Pilot Plant so that students can gain exposure to a real production and quality control environmen­t to prepare them for the industry,” he said.

Mathews added that the university has also set up a real community pharmacy within the campus where students are placed on rotation from Year 1 so that they are able to learn all about Community Pharmacy practice.

QIU CCO Nicholas Goh congratula­ted the faculty for their achievemen­t, stressing that the programme was designed to ensure that the graduates were well prepared to excel when they entered the working world.

“The Pharmacy Board only requires students to undergo two weeks of training in clinical, industrial, and community pharmacy practice areas. However, our programme offers 20 weeks of attachment training, because we want to make sure that our graduates are prepared to excel when they start their careers.”

Student-centred learning is highly-emphasised throughout QIU’s Pharmacy programme where the delivery method involves process-based and problem-based learning from Year 1.

It is where students master communicat­ion skills, team work, leadership skills, presentati­on skills, confidence building, time management and evidence-based learning.

This enables pharmacist­s working in hospital and clinical environmen­ts to interact with medical doctors and see the same patients as their medical counterpar­ts.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Pharmacy students in the lab.
Pharmacy students in the lab.
 ??  ?? Pharmacy students visiting an old folk’s home.
Pharmacy students visiting an old folk’s home.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia