With a decade of introduction of pharmacy practice education in India, there has been a paradigm shift in
Thanking you
Akshaya Srikanth
Pharm.D Internee
Hyderabad, India
the practice of pharmacy in the country. In spite of this, pharmacy practice education faces many
challenges before it can transform the pharmaceutical care practice in India from a product-oriented
approach to patient-oriented care. Pharmacy education in India is mainly industry oriented. The
curriculum at the undergraduate level is more or less designed for preparing students towards industry
rather than for patient-oriented services like hospital, clinical, and community pharmacy. To train the
graduate pharmacists to provide patient-oriented services, a pharmacy practice course was started at a postgraduate level. Pharmacy practice curriculum enters its tenth year in India since its beginning in 1997.
The curriculum trains the postgraduates in rational therapeutics, patient counseling, pharmacovigilance,
therapeutic drug monitoring, clinical research,and toxicology to name a few. With the efforts being on
introducing the advanced clinical-based courses of the Doctor of pharmacy (PharmD) degree in India, there is a need to contemplate where the profession stands at this juncture. As of today pharmacy practice is at a
crossroads in India, facing numerous challenges that need to be addressed before marching further. This
letter is an effort to identify deficiencies, regulatory requirements, and evaluate the current status of pharmacy practice education in India.
Some key-Insights like:
- The profession is restricted only to the hospitals linked to a pharmacy practice school
- Regulatory framework does not recognize the need for clinical pharmacist at the national level
- Trained clinical pharmacists toward industry as there is almost no opportunity in the hospital setting
- The need for adding industry relevant topics in course curriculum – Dilemma of Dilution vs. Evolution.
Thanking you
Akshaya Srikanth
Pharm.D Internee
Hyderabad, India
I have been bringing my Pharm D students to India for their advanced pharmacy rotation. This provides an opportunity for interaction and mutual learning from Peers. My current partners in this endeavor are - Bangalore Baptist Hospital, Manipal University and St Peters Institute, Warangal.
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