Systematic education of self-medication at Tokyo university of pharmacy and life sciences

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Abstract

The promotion of self-medication by pharmacies, with the aim of encouraging a patient’s self-selection of proper OTC drug, is written about in the national action plan “Japan is Back”. The subject of self-medication has been improved in the 2013 revised edition of “Model Core Curriculum for Pharmaceutical Education”. At Tokyo University of Pharmacy and Life Sciences, the systematic education of self-medication was started from the onset of the six-year course in the third, fourth and fifth grade. We introduce here a new approach in our systematic education of self-medication. In the practice of the fourth grade, groups of around 5-6 students are formed. The pharmacy students assume various roles-of pharmacist, rater, observer, and chairman-and perform role-playing. We prepared a standardized patient (SP) showing various symptoms. The student of the role of pharmacist asks about the SP’s symptoms, chooses an OTC drug suitable for the SP, and explains the OTC drug to the SP. After the role-playing, those in the roles of rater, observer, SP, and faculty give feedback to the student who played the role of pharmacist. Because we conduct this roleplaying using SPs with a variety of symptoms, we can create a situation similar to a real drugstore.

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Narui, K., Samizo, K., Inoue, M., & Watanabe, K. (2016). Systematic education of self-medication at Tokyo university of pharmacy and life sciences. Yakugaku Zasshi. Pharmaceutical Society of Japan. https://doi.org/10.1248/yakushi.15-00257-3

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