3.8 Editorial Material

Reintroduction of Post-Baccalaureate Doctor of Pharmacy (PharmD, Post-Bac) Program in Nepal : Exploration of the Obstacles and Solutions to Move Forward

Journal

ADVANCES IN MEDICAL EDUCATION AND PRACTICE
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages 159-166

Publisher

DOVE MEDICAL PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.2147/AMEP.S348601

Keywords

clinical pharmacy; PharmD; pharmacist; Nepal

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This article highlights the status of clinical pharmacy education in Nepal and explores the challenges and solutions in reintroducing the Post-Baccalaureate Doctor of Pharmacy (PharmD, Post-Bac) program. The program was previously launched but discontinued in 2014. The revival of the program is crucial and strategies need to be formulated to promote the role of clinical pharmacists and revisit the Bachelor of Pharmacy (BPharm) curriculum.
This commentary article highlights the status of clinical pharmacy education in Nepal, explores the challenges and solutions in sustainably reintroducing Post-Baccalaureate Doctor of Pharmacy (PharmD, Post-Bac) in Nepal, as was previously launched by Kathmandu University (KU) Department of Pharmacy in 2010, and suggests a few prospects forward. Clinical pharmacy practice has remained on the sidelines and subordinate to physicians in Nepal. KU launched the PharmD (Post-Bac.) as a postgraduate program to establish the professional identity of clinical pharmacists in the country. However, despite unremitting efforts, the program did not thrive long and held since 2014. This paper aimed to explore challenges that remained at the forefront of the program and provide possible solutions for its reintroduction. The KU produced three batches of PharmD Post-Bac. graduates and now the revival of the program is crucial. Undoubtedly, a well-trained clinical preceptor can bring significant changes in the quality and competency of the PharmD graduates. Advocacy programs to foster the role of clinical pharmacists in the patient care services and revisiting of Bachelor of Pharmacy (BPharm) curriculum to complement the necessity of the PharmD program are needed. The non-sustenance of the PharmD program is emblematic of the dire mosaic that the clinical pharmacists are facing while delivering patient-oriented services in the country. Hence, strategies need to be formulated for the revival and sustainability of the program.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

3.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available