Pharmacy: Difference between revisions
imported>Bryan Eskew No edit summary |
imported>Bryan Eskew No edit summary |
||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
Pharmacy is broken into many disciplines and practice areas. | Pharmacy is broken into many disciplines and practice areas. | ||
*[[Pharmacology]]- how drugs interact with biological systems. This field encompasses [[pharmacokinetics]] and [[pharmacodynamics]]. | *[[Pharmacology]]- how drugs interact with biological systems. This field encompasses [[pharmacokinetics]] and [[pharmacodynamics]]. | ||
*[[Medicinal Chemistry]]how drugs interact with biochemicals, and how drugs are discovered and created | *[[Medicinal Chemistry]]- how drugs interact with biochemicals, and how drugs are discovered and created | ||
*[[Pharmaceutics]]- how drugs dosage forms are made | *[[Pharmaceutics]]- how drugs dosage forms are made | ||
*[[Pharmacy Practice]]- interactions with patients to optimize drug therapy | *[[Pharmacy Practice]]- interactions with patients to optimize drug therapy |
Revision as of 21:25, 3 March 2009
Pharmacy is the health science that studies the use of drugs in biological systems. The Pharmacy profession is charged with the safe and effective use of drug therapy. A practitioner of pharmacy is a pharmacist.
A pharmacy is also the location where drugs are dispensed. Pharmacies are located in both the community as a business, or in an institutional setting such as a hospital or nursing home.
Disciplines
Pharmacy is broken into many disciplines and practice areas.
- Pharmacology- how drugs interact with biological systems. This field encompasses pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics.
- Medicinal Chemistry- how drugs interact with biochemicals, and how drugs are discovered and created
- Pharmaceutics- how drugs dosage forms are made
- Pharmacy Practice- interactions with patients to optimize drug therapy
Within each field, and practitioner of pharmacy can specialize in a number of processes, from specific types of dosage forms, to specific types of diseases (cardiology or infectious disease for example), to specific drug families (examples: ACE inhibitors or fluroquinolones).
Practitioners
The usual practitioner of pharmacy is a pharmacist. A pharmacist is trained in a professional program for 6-8 years, and is then licensed in the state in which they practice. Pharmacists generally practice in a community or institutional (hosptial) setting, and are concerned with optimizing drug therapy in patients.
Ph. D. programs are also available in the field of pharmacy. These programs are often concerned with drug development.