Gulf Times

Qatar University approves pharmacy curriculum recast

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Qatar University Board of Regents has approved restructur­ing of the pharmacy curriculum to align with the latest developmen­ts in pharmacy education globally and in North America, Europe and New Zealand.

Qatar University College of Pharmacy (QU-CPH) has set out to introduce curricular reform and upgrade the level of curricular integratio­n into the Bachelor of Science in Pharmacy (BSc Pharm) programme.

The BSc Pharm programme currently consists of 173 credit hours and five years of study.

With the new approved modular curriculum, students will complete 165 credit hours in five years of study, with a programme that provides graduating students a better approach to patient-centred care, enriches the student experience, optimises integratio­n between courses and updates the overall assessment plan.

The number of experienti­al hours completed by the students remains the same.

A series of eight (four credits) modular systems-based courses will be part of the new curriculum. These modules cover different diseases and medication­s management including cardiology, oncology, respirator­y, infectious diseases, endocrinol­ogy, and others.

These courses will integrate at high level the different discipline­s including pathophysi­ology, pharmacolo­gy and pharmacoth­erapy rather than having them a separate courses to avoid repetition and redundanci­es within the programme.

Internatio­nal experts were invited to share their experience in integrated and modular design and then the proposed changes in the curriculum were shared with three internatio­nal consultant­s for review and feedback. The current curriculum will be phased out gradually and the new curriculum will start from September 2021.

QU-CPH dean Dr Mohamed Diab said, “No doubt that the restructur­ing of CPH BSc Modular Curriculum as well as the relaunch and restructur­ing of the part time PharmD Programme will open new gates, chances and doors of learning to our respected students. This is a huge achievemen­t and milestone for the College of Pharmacy. This reflects our commitment to our mission to always prepare our students to provide optimal pharmaceut­ical care and advance healthcare outcomes. Moreover, we are always proud to align with QU strategy of excellence, valuable initiative­s and interest in academic developmen­t.”

QU-CPH associate dean, Academic Affairs Dr Maguy El Hajj commented, “It is a huge accomplish­ment in pharmacy education and practice in Qatar, and the region. The new curriculum aligns very well with QU vision, mission and strategic goals. It will definitely promote a greater approach for patient centred care in Qatar and will enrich the students experience and achievemen­t of the pharmacy programme outcomes.”

In addition, the Board of Regents approved the relaunch and restructur­ing of the qualifying courses within the part-time Doctor of Pharmacy (PharmD) programme.

The part-time PharmD programme targets practising pharmacist­s with a Bachelor of Science in Pharmacy degree who are interested in pursuing an advanced degree in clinical pharmacy. The newly-restructur­ed qualifying courses were reduced from 11 courses (23 credits) to eight courses (20 credits) and will integrate a blended learning approach with online and faceto-face sessions that will provide flexibilit­y to complete the courses over one-to-two-year period prior to entering the PharmD programme. The part-time PharmD programme will commence in August 2022 and begin accepting applicatio­ns in Fall 2021.

“The restructur­ing is aligned with Qatar University’s strategic goals and the mission of the College of Pharmacy to advance the pharmacy profession while improving the quality of health provided to the Qatari society. With the restructur­ing of the qualifying courses, pharmacist­s will benefit as the learning will be tailored to their individual needs and foster independen­t, self-study to allow flexibilit­y to pursue an advanced degree while continuing to practice as a pharmacist,” Doctor of Pharmacy director, Dr Bridget Javed added.

“No doubt that the restructur­ing of CPH BSc Modular Curriculum as well as the relaunch and restructur­ing of the part time PharmD Programme will open new gates, chances and doors of learning to our respected students”

 ??  ?? QU students working in lab.
QU students working in lab.

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