Imprimer

The previous four courses at Algiers’ summer course are oriented on Groningen method, but as you know this method is for prescribing physicians and not for pharmacists. At each course appreciatively 60 % of our participants are pharmacists, and there is no sense to teach them how to prescribe in place of how to dispense the medicines. According to, we decide to teach the problem-based and skill-based learning to equip with skill and knowledge the physicians and pharmacists all together and to develop a partnership between the two professionals in order to use medicines successfully and more securely (see the figure). The Groningen method is always used for physicians, but in parallel, a teaching method based on problem solving process and normative decision process is integrated for the pharmacists. The course for pharmacists introduces a logical step-by-step approach to solve the patient’s problem either by counselling the patient suffering from symptoms (including screening for the potential disease related to the apparent symptom and risk assessment by a software analysis programme developed for this issue) when the patient need a pharmacist’s advice or want to know more about his disease and medication. In addition, analysing the physician’s prescription to secure the medicines before to deliver them (by using “l’opinion pharmaceutique” called also “pharmaceutical opinion formulary” (figure) when more information is needed before dispensing medicines, this is the physician-pharmacist partnership or co-operation to secure the treatment and the outcome. The apprenticeship and examination using objective structured clinical examination (OSCE) are different in their content but not in their objectives. They are taking place at the same time, in the same area, in order to teach and evaluate the physician-pharmacist co-operation.