An approach to educating our pharmaceutical students about Kampo medicine in the six-year system of undergraduate pharmacy education at Kyoto Pharmaceutical University is introduced, including the author’s opinions. Curriculum revisions have been made in our university for students entering after 2012. In teaching Kampo medicine at present, a medical doctor and an on-site pharmacist share information difficult to give in a lecture with the teaching staff in my laboratory. For example, before the curriculum revision, we conferred with a pharmacist and a doctor in the course “Kampo Medicine A, B” for 4th year students, in which students were presented a basic knowledge of Kampo medicine, the application of important Kampo medicines, combinations of crude drugs, etc. Further, in our “Introduction to KampoMedicine” for 6th year students, presented after they have practiced in hospitals and community pharmacies, we again lecture on the pharmacological characteristics of Kampo medicines, on “pattern (Sho)”, and on evidence-based medicine (EBM) and research studies of important Kampo medicines. After our curriculum revision, “Kampo Medicine A, B” was rearranged into the courses “Kampo and Pharmacognosy” and “Clinical Kampo Medicine”. “Kampo and Pharmacognosy” is now provided in the second semester of the 3rd year, and in this course we lecture on the basic knowledge of Kampo medicine. An advanced lecture will be given on “Clinical Kampo Medicine” in the 6th year. We are searching for the best way to interest students in Kampo medicine, and to counteract any misunderstandings about Kampo medicine.
CITATION STYLE
Matsuda, H. (2016, March 1). Approach to teaching kampo medicine at Kyoto pharmaceutical University. Yakugaku Zasshi. Pharmaceutical Society of Japan. https://doi.org/10.1248/yakushi.15-00232-2
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