Department of Model Pharmacy

Model Pharmacy

Discover the Model Pharmacy at our college, which was painstakingly created to meet PCI ER 2020 requirements. It serves as a model for pharmaceutical excellence and offers students a state-of-the-art learning environment.

Features of Model-pharmacy

Discover our Model Lab, which is outfitted with all the necessary tools for a successful bill printing process, including computer stationery, dummy bill books, secure arrangements for Schedule X and NDPS medications, pharmacist licenses, owner information, height charts, dummy devices, drug information books, health displays, and screening devices (glucometer, B.P. monitor).

Community model pharmacy training objectives :

1. The goal of the community model pharmacy is to educate students about the prerequisites for operating a pharmacy as well as to portray the standard image of a pharmacy.

2. Offering computerized courses that assist students in learning pharmacy skills.

3. Instruct students on how to properly examine the medical ticket, spot any pharmacological errors, and know when to discard them.

4. Students will learn and acquire good communication skills from a simulation of several scenarios involving members of the local community, pharmacists, patients, and their families.

5. Instruction in performing standard dosage calculations using the patient's weight, age, or body surface area.

6. Train students to complete any information from sources in the pharmacy.

7. Teach students how to make decisions about their use of over-the-counter (OTC) medications and how much to spend on them.

Educational services :

  • Introducing college students to different sorts of medicine and the technique in which it is consumed.
  • To teach pupils the proper manner to store drugs and how to arrange them in both public and private pharmacies.
  • A presentation on the types and applications of plant-based medicines for students.
  • To educate pupils about the significance of the pharmacist's role in the community
  • Arranging scientific conferences in collaboration with pharmaceutical firms to identify new medications and to clarify the principles behind the practice of medicine.
  • Preparing students for their entry into the workforce by teaching them public relations and pharmacy-related interpersonal skills.

Community-based services :

  • Provide patients with diabetes and high blood pressure lifestyle counsel and guidance by creating pamphlets about recommended lifestyle changes and drugs to avoid.
  • Coordinating medical convoys with the university, the Ministry of Health, the Ministry of Youth, and other neighbourhood organizations.
  • The pharmacy's charity section provides low-income individuals with free medication distribution.
  • Health awareness pamphlets contain homeopathic remedies that should be used in order to prevent and/or avoid a variety of illnesses.