Introduction to Social Pharmacy
Definition and Scope. Social Pharmacy as a discipline and its scope in improving public health. Role of pharmacists in Public Health; Concept of Health -WHO Definition, various dimensions, determinants, and health indicators; National Health Policy – Indian perspective; Public and Private Health System in India, NationalHealth Mission; Introduction to Millennium Development Goals, Sustainable Development Goals, FIP DevelopmentGoals |
Preventive Healthcare – Role of Pharmacist
Demography and Family Planning; Mother and child health, importance of breastfeeding, effects of infant milk substitutes and bottle feeding; Overview of Vaccines, types of immunity and immunization Effect of Environment on Health – Water pollution, the importance of safe drinking water, waterborne diseases, air pollution, noise pollution, sewage and solid waste disposal, occupational illnesses, Environmental pollution due to pharmaceuticals; Psychosocial Pharmacy: Drugs of misuse and abuse –psychotropics, narcotics, alcohol, tobacco products.Social Impact of these habits on social health and productivity and suicidal behaviors |
Nutrition and Health
Basics of nutrition – Macronutrients and Micronutrients; Importance of water and fibers in diet; Balanced diet, Malnutrition, nutrition deficiency diseases, ill effects of junk foods, calorific and nutritive values of various foods, fortification of food, Introduction to food safety, adulteration of foods, effects of artificial ripening, use of pesticides, genetically modified foods; Dietary supplements, nutraceuticals, food supplements– indications, benefits, Drug-Food Interactions |
Introduction to Microbiology and Common Microorganisms
Epidemiology: Introduction to epidemiology, and its applications. Understanding of terms such as epidemic, pandemic, endemic, mode of transmission, outbreak, quarantine, isolation, incubation period, contact tracing, morbidity, mortality, Causative agents, epidemiology and clinical presentations and Role of Pharmacists in educating the public in the prevention of the following communicable diseases: Respiratory infections – chickenpox, measles, rubella, mumps, influenza (including Avian-Flu, H1N1, SARS, MERS, COVID-19), diphtheria, whooping cough, meningococcal meningitis, acute respiratory infections, tuberculosis, Ebola; Intestinal infections – poliomyelitis, viral hepatitis, cholera, acute diarrheal diseases, typhoid, amebiasis, worm infestations, food poisoning; Arthropod-borne infections – dengue, malaria, filariasis and, chikungunya; Surface infections – trachoma, tetanus, leprosy; STDs, HIV/AIDS |
Role of Pharmacist in Disaster Management
Role of Pharmacist in Disaster Management |
National Health Programme
Introduction to health systems and all ongoing National Health programs in India, their objectives, functioning, outcome, and the role of pharmacists |
Pharmacoeconomics
Introduction, basic terminologies, importance of pharmacoeconomics |
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