School of Pharmacy
Dr. Robert Supernaw,
Dean and Professor of
the School of Pharmacy.
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Curriculum Overview

Technology. All Wingate University pharmacy students are required to have laptop personal computers. Students are trained to use their laptops to access class notes prior to and during each class. Laptops are used extensively in each class. Wingate University pharmacy classrooms provide wireless connections to the medical library system and to the Internet, allowing students to retrieve not only class-related materials, but drug and disease management materials. Additionally, students electronically network with pharmacist mentors and with real patients assigned to them. A rapid-impression electronic system allows students to register their opinions and answers to questions posed to form a viewable class composite.

Professional Orientation Sequence. The Professional Orientation Sequence entails many topics that will help the Wingate University pharmacy student better understand his/her role in the profession of pharmacy. A Top 200 drug exploration, during the first two semesters of the curriculum, helps the student learn the names and functions of the most commonly prescribed medications. This is followed by the development of pharmaceutical calculations skills. All students are required to develop their medical Spanish language skills in their second professional year, and application of these language skills begins in the practice experiences that follow. Additionally, instruction and practice in cardiopulmonary resuscitation and basic life support complement the second year. In their third year of the professional program, Wingate University pharmacy students are trained to assume roles as leaders in the professional organizations that advocate the advancement of the profession of pharmacy, and they are trained to become leaders in their communities.  

Patient Assessment Sequence. An integrated course sequence in biochemistry, human anatomy and physiology, and pathophysiology culminates with additional integration into a patient physical assessment course. Beginning in the second year, this sequence entails course work in diagnostic clinical laboratory medicine and patient assessment. The patient assessment component develops the student’s physical examination and monitoring skills as well as patient inventory skills.

Problem Management Sequence. The problem management sequence is inaugurated with an overview of the principles of drug actions – specifically, the mechanisms of action of drugs. Following this overview of pharmacology and medicinal chemistry, the sequence entails discussions of pharmacotherapy for each of the most common medical (physical and psychological) conditions confronting healthcare providers. This sequence in pharmacotherapy essentially follows an organ systems approach. The problem management sequence provides the core therapeutic knowledge necessary for the contemporary practice of pharmacy in the ambulatory and acute care arenas. The elements of pharmacotherapy in this sequence are the mechanisms of drug action, dosing, monitoring drug and nondrug therapy, pharmacoeconomic issues, patient-related issues, and therapeutic outcomes assessment. The sequence includes instruction in endocrine pharmacotherapy, infectious disease, over-the-counter drugs, and durable medical equipment in Semester-3. The pharmacotherapy associated with reproductive, renal, gastrointestinal, hepatic, and musculoskeletal, systems and dermatology and nutrition are covered in Semester-4. In Semester-5, topics addressed include the cardiovascular and respiratory systems along with course work in hematology, oncology, and the special populations of pediatrics and geriatrics. In Semester-6, neurology, pain management, psychiatry, sensory organs, women’s and men’s health pharmacotherapy principles are developed. Finally, a review of drugs by category is provided at the end of the didactic curriculum.  

Pharmaceutical Care Sequence. The pharmaceutical care sequence entails course work that is necessary to build the skills necessary to provide pharmaceutical care to a variety of patient prototypes. The sequence begins with a course on how to develop a patient database and how to construct a patient care plan. This is followed by the development of professional patient-centered communication and counseling skills. In the second year, the student will learn the essentials of dosing secondary to the knowledge of patient-specific absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion of drugs. In the third professional year, this sequence entails financial and personnel management and herbals, alternative, and complementary medicines.

Pharmacy Practice Sequence. The pharmacy practice sequence is an eclectic mixture of courses grounded in the various functions of the contemporary practice of pharmacy. The ability to retrieve and analyze medical information is emphasized within this sequence. These skills are utilized throughout the curriculum. Additionally, the sequence related to the practice of pharmacy helps the student to develop his/her drug order processing and compounding skills for special dosage forms, including parenteral products. In the second year, this sequence provides the legal and ethical backdrop to the profession. Additionally, in the second year, students learn the processes and techniques of immunization administration.

Problem-Based Learning Case Sequence. Each semester of the didactic curriculum, students will break into teams of approximately seven to dissect cases related to patient problems that are representative of commonly encountered problems in pharmacy practice. Students are trained to think critically, and to use group study to maximize learning. Most cases considered will build upon the principles explored contemporaneously within the other course sequences.

Professionalization Sequence. The professionalization sequence will mold the pharmacy student into a professional pharmacist. Initially, the student will electronically network with a pharmacist-mentor, one-on-one. In the second semester, a real patient will be added to the electronic discussions. In this manner, the student will learn the human side of medicine. Within the professionalization sequence, the student’s team (6-7 students in all) will develop a healthcare related community outreach project. In the second year, the student will learn how to evaluate medical studies formally presented as well as those chronicled in the medical literature. Also in the second year of the curriculum, discussions of psychosocial aspects of illness and health including gender and cultural implications are developed. In the fifth semester, the student will consider patient-centered issues of ethical decision making related to business, professional, and biomedical dilemmas and challenges. In the sixth semester, the student will develop formal presentation skills in the practice issues seminar course.

Population Pharmacotherapy Sequence. Within the problem management sequence, a special set of courses related to special populations entails course work in pediatrics, geriatrics, pain management, women’s health, and men’s health.

Practice Experience Sequence. There are practice experiences throughout the curriculum, at each level of the curriculum. In the first year, the student will network with a pharmacist mentor and a real patient. Additionally, the student will participate in the early pharmacy practice experience in a community pharmacy setting. In the second year, the student will begin basic practice skills in an hospital or outpatient pharmacy setting. In the third year, the student will learn basic clinical skills in clinic, ambulatory care, primary care, and institutional settings. The entire fourth year is devoted to 48 weeks of full-time rotations in advanced community practice, advanced institutional practice, ambulatory care practice, long-term care practice, and acute care practice settings. There are also ample opportunities for three special elective rotations, each six weeks in length, to complement the clinical experience learning program.


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