Nov 25, 2024  
2017-2018 Academic Bulletin (Catalog) (Jan 2018) 
    
2017-2018 Academic Bulletin (Catalog) (Jan 2018) [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Pharmacy, PharmD


Return to {$returnto_text} Return to: Degrees, Majors, and Concentrations Offered


Curriculum Summary

The PharmD degree is granted upon successful completion of the professional curriculum and compliance with the requirements of the University for graduation. The course of instruction covers eight terms over four academic years (see Curriculum).

The curriculum includes lecture and laboratory courses that are delivered using a variety of pedagogy. Although students are introduced to the clinical environment as early as the fall term of the first professional year, clinical instruction is emphasized in the third and fourth years of the curriculum. During this time students receive experiential learning in traditional practice settings such as community and hospital pharmacy arenas as well as advanced clinical rotations in internal medicine, ambulatory care, pediatrics, mental health, parenteral nutrition, cardiology, critical care and other specialty areas.

Students may be required to complete a portion of the introductory and advanced practice experiences in various parts of the state. US rotations located outside Tennessee (e.g., Alaska, Arizona, North Carolina) and International professional experiences (e.g., England, New Zealand, Australia, Japan, Spain, Ireland, Sweden, Hungary, Gambia, Thailand, Turkey and France) are available to a limited number of students.

CPR Certification

All College of Pharmacy students are required to obtain American Heart Association Healthcare Provider CPR certification with external defibrillation by the end of their first academic term. Following initial certification, all students must maintain active CPR certification during the P2, P3, and P4 years. Students will not be allowed to enter the subsequent year without approved CPR certification. For the convenience of UT College of Pharmacy students, the UT Chapter of the American Pharmacists Association-Academy of Student Pharmacists (APhA-ASP) offers this certification during orientation and to third year students.

Content Areas

  1. Pharmacology
  2. Medicinal Chemistry
  3. Biopharmaceutics
  4. Sterile and Non-Sterile Product Preparation
  5. Pharmacotherapy including both prescription and non-prescription medications and supplements
  6. Communications with Patient and Healthcare Professionals
  7. Patient Assessment
  8. Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics
  9. Pharmacogenomics
  10. Pharmacy Management and Pharmacoeconomics
  11. Healthcare Systems and the Medication Use Process
  12. Experiential Learning, which is conducted across all 4 years

First Professional Year (Class of 2021)


Second Professional Year (Class of 2021)


Third Professional Year (Class of 2021)


Fourth Professional Year (Class of 2021)


Total: 2.5 credit hours (didactic)


Total: 2.5 credit hours (didactic)


Final Three Terms (Class of 2021)


Students must take the following during the last three terms (P3 Spring, P4 Fall, P4 Spring). Students will be provided a list of rotations that are included in each of the following categories during the P3 fall term.

1 month APPE Advanced Community Pharmacy Rotation
1 month APPE Advanced Institutional Pharmacy Rotation
1 month APPE Ambulatory Care Rotation
1 month APPE Medicine Rotation
3 months APPE Patient Care Rotations
4 months APPE Elective Rotations (Patient Care or Other)
1 month IPPE Rotations (PHCY 4000 - IPPE: Community Pharmacy Practice  & PHCY 4001 - IPPE: Institutional Pharmacy Practice ; 2 weeks each which may also be taken during summers after the P1 and P2 years.)

Third Professional Year Spring Term: PHCY 3103 - Medication Therapy Management  Cr Hrs: 1 continued*

Fourth Professional Year Fall Term: PHCY 4200 - Pharmacy Exam Review l  Cr Hrs: 2*

Fourth Professional Year Spring Term: PHCY 4200 - Pharmacy Exam Review l  Cr Hrs: 2 continued*, PHCY 4201 - Pharmacy Exam Review ll  Cr Hrs: 2

* Students complete over the fall or spring terms

Elective Policy

  1. All students will take a minimum of 8 credit hours of didactic electives.
  2. All students will take a minimum of 6 credit hours of electives before the end of the P3 Fall term.
  3. All students will take a minimum of 1 month of electives in the last 3 terms of the program (the P3 Spring, P4 Fall, or P4 Spring terms) for a minimum total of 2 credit hours.
  4. Students enrolled in the Informatics certificate program may obtain all 8 hours of elective credit through that program.
  5. Students enrolled in a Masters of Business Administration degree program may receive up to 6 hours of elective credit through that program. The student is responsible to obtain and submit the necessary paperwork to obtain such credit. Information regarding requirements can be obtained from the Associate Dean of Academic Affairs.
  6. Students enrolled in the Health Informatics and Information Management dual degree program may receive up to 8 hours of elective credit through that program.

Return to {$returnto_text} Return to: Degrees, Majors, and Concentrations Offered