Data
Official data in SubjectManager for the following academic year: 2024-2025
Course director
Vida Róbert György
assistant professor,
Department of Pharmaceutics and University Pharmacy
Number of hours/semester
Lectures: 28 hours
Practices: 0 hours
Seminars: 0 hours
Total of: 28 hours
Subject data
- Code of subject: OPO-KL1-T
- 2 Credit
- Pharmacy
- Medical-biological theoretical module and practical skills module
- spring
OPO-GE2-T finished , OPO-H2E-T finished
Course headcount limitations
min. 5 people – max. 80 people
Topic
The aim of the course is to introduce the most important clinical fields to the pharmacy students. The knowledge related to the most common disorders, and their non-pharmacological and pharmacological therapies, and also the therapeutic algorithms and regimens are crucial for the pharmacists nowadays in every therapeutic field from the community pharmacy, hospital and clinical pharmacy to the clinical research pharmacy as well. The course is closely linked to the pharmacotherapy studies and other clinical oriented subjects in the 9th semester (e.g.: clinical laboratory studies, clinical pharmacy and pharmacotherapy management, forensic pathology and toxicology, toxicology).
Lectures
- 1. Basic principles of pharmacotherapy in internal medicine 1. - Vida Róbert György
- 2. Basic principles of pharmacotherapy in internal medicine 2. - Kun Szilárd János
- 3. Basic principles of pharmacotherapy in cardiology 1. - Magyar Klára
- 4. Basic principles of pharmacotherapy in cardiology 2. - Magyar Klára
- 5. Basic principles of pharmacotherapy in cardiology: anticoagulant, antiplatelet and statin therapy 1. - Magyar Klára
- 6. Basic principles of pharmacotherapy in cardiology: anticoagulant, antiplatelet and statin therapy 2. - Mayer Klára
- 7. Basic principles of diseases and pharmacotherapy in pulmonology 1. - Ruzsics István
- 8. Basic principles of diseases and pharmacotherapy in pulmonology 2. - Ruzsics István
- 9. Basic principles of pharmacotherapy in endocrinology 1. - Nemes Orsolya
- 10. Basic principles of pharmacotherapy in endocrinology 2. - Nemes Orsolya
- 11. Basic principles of pharmacotherapy in gastroenterology 1. - Mohás Márton
- 12. Basic principles of pharmacotherapy in gastroenterology 2. - Mohás Márton
- 13. Basic principles of pharmacotherapy in hepatology 1. - Pár Alajos
- 14. Basic principles of pharmacotherapy in hepatology 2. - Pár Alajos
- 15. Basic principles of diseases and therapy in nephrology 1. - Sélley Eszter
- 16. Basic principles of diseases and therapy in nephrology 2. - Sélley Eszter
- 17. Basic principles of pharmacotherapy in metabolic disorders and diabetes 1. - Kun Szilárd János
- 18. Basic principles of pharmacotherapy in metabolic disorders and diabetes 2. - Kun Szilárd János
- 19. Basic principles of pharmacotherapy in hematology 1. - Pammer Judit Éva
- 20. Basic principles of pharmacotherapy in hematology 2. - Pammer Judit Éva
- 21. The basics of liver surgery. - Papp András
- 22. The basics of esophageal and stomach surgery. - Papp András
- 23. The basics of transplantation surgery 1. - Varga Ádám
- 24. The basics of transplantation surgery 2. - Varga Ádám
- 25. The basics of coloproctology surgery 1. - Baracs József
- 26. The basics of coloproctology surgery 2. - Baracs József
- 27. The basics of anaesthesiology and intensive care 1. - Bátai István (AITI)
- 28. The basics of anaesthesiology and intensive care 2. - Bátai István (AITI)
Practices
Seminars
Reading material
Obligatory literature
Literature developed by the Department
Notes
Recommended literature
Karen J. Tietze. Clinical Skills for Pharmacists. A Patient-Focused Approach, 3rd edition, 2004.
Roger Walker, Cate Whittlesea (eds.): Clinical Pharmacy and Therapeutics, 5th edition, Churchill Livingstone Elsevier, 2012.
Christopher A Langley and Dawn Belcher: Applied Pharmaceutical Practice. Second Edition. Pharmaceutical Press. 2012.
Sally-Anne Francis, Felicity Smith, John Malkinson, Andrew Constanti and Kevin Taylor. Integrated Pharmacy Case Studies. Pharmaceutical Press, 2015. First edition.
Stephen A. McClave, Denise Baird Schwatrz, Debra S. Kovacevich, Sarah J. Miller. The A. S. P. E. N. Adult Nutrition Support Core Curriculum, 2nd Edition, 2012.
Rang, Dale, Ritter, Moore: Pharmacology, 9th edition, Elsevier Churchill Livingstone, 2019
B. G. Katzung (ed.): Basic and Clinical Pharmacology, 14th edition, Lange Medical Books/McGraw-Hill, 2018
Conditions for acceptance of the semester
The presence in the classes and individual assigments.
Mid-term exams
There are no midterm and end-of-the term tests.
Making up for missed classes
The absences should be discussed with the course director.
Exam topics/questions
Written exams are based on the lectures.
There will be 50 single choice question in the test. Assessment of the student performance is carried out according to a five-grade scale:
100-86,1% - excellent (5); 86-77,1% - good (4); 77-68,1% - satisfactory (3); 68-60,1% - pass (2); and below 60,0% - fail (1) respectively.
Examiners
- Vida Róbert György