Mbalizi Institute Of Health Sciences

Sunrise Campus - Mbozi

About the Programme

The Pharmacy Profession is ideally the branch of medical science that trains a person to link health science with chemical science through the research, discovery, development, creation, and distribution of medicine/drugs. Drugs/Medicines are substances (chemical science) that work together with the body to relieve a person from illness through diagnosis, prevention, and cure. These substances can either or in combination be of animal, plant, chemical or marine origin. A person who studies and practices pharmacy is called a pharmacist and can build a career anywhere in the pharmacy value chain, from research to distribution of drugs and each stage has great monetary and non-monetary returns.

The profession is rewarding because a pharmacist is the medication expert in the healthcare system, providing patients with vital medicine/drugs and information to help them manage their medication therapy with minimum to no side effects by making sure doses administered or prescribed are safe, with no potential drug interactions that could potentially affect a patient. Furthermore, pharmacists can also be involved in health screening, blood pressure tests, assist in providing vaccinations, and recommending optimal use of medication.

Basically, today, pharmacy attracts the young and energetic talent to become one of the best professions. Pharmacy offers the resources, opportunities and exibility needed to balance a successful healthcare career with a satisfying personal life. Pharmacy, furthermore, offers lifelong continued education, giving its practitioners the opportunity to make professional development part of the job. Graduates can expect to get on the fast track in one of the most dynamic industries in health care, enjoying prestigious jobs in a field that increasingly relies upon their skills and expertise. Pharmacy graduates are offered many opportunities and learn wide variety of things with educating patients about their medication therapy being the most important. The discipline of pharmacy has a good future, offering wide range of employment opportunities with an excellent salary.

Below are some basic skills important for a person wishing to pursue a career in pharmacy:

Analytical skills to evaluate a patient’s needs, the prescriber’s directions, and the ability to use one’s technical knowledge to make the best decision

Communication skills to explain how to take a medication and any possible side effects that patients may experience

Information technology (computer) skills to use electronic health systems easily that are gaining pace in the world today

Managerial skills to progress in one’s career, to manage a pharmacy inventory, and oversee staff such as pharmacy technicians

Detail-oriented nature to accurately ll prescriptions and use technical information to make decisions that are adjusted to each individual patient’s well-being.

These skills are extremely helpful due to the pharmacy profession being remarkably diverse and not limited to health facilities such as hospitals and clinics. To expound on this assertion, below are the several types of pharmacists:

Clinical Pharmacists, these are pharmacy professional known my most that work in clinics, hospitals, dispensaries, and other health-care facilities. Pharmacists in these settings work alongside physicians, nurses, and other healthcare teammates, providing direct health care to patients. In Tanzania, we are used to seeing them in the pharmacy rooms or departments, giving out medicines/drugs prescribed by physicians after diagnosis and walking through the patient on use and general administration to ensure a full recovery. However, a pharmacist’s role in these settings do not end there, but they also do rounds in hospitals, overseeing that the recommended dosage is timely given to patients, and at times through the process conduct tests and provide consultations such giving dietary and lifestyle advise to patience of high risk or receiving treatment on noncommunicable diseases.

Community Pharmacists, these are professional pharmacists who prescribe medicine or drugs over the counter to patients outside the health-care facilities such as hospitals, clinics, and dispensaries. They provide such services through retail or wholesale stores (Pharmacies or Drug Stores) they either own or work for. These types of pharmacists are business minded and thus need more than the pure pharmacy knowledge, but also managerial and overall business knowledge to not just ensure patients receive the best care, but also increase pro ts without compromising any medical ethics. They are diverse, providing services beyond normal working hours, be on call for private patients and usually the “go-to” people when hospitals run out or lack prescriptions. Consultant Pharmacists, these are pharmacist that provide professional advice to health facilities and their fellow pharmacists on medication use, improvement of pharmacy services to mention a few. They can also give direct advice to patients of medication use and general administration.

Pharmaceutical Industry Pharmacists, these are what some would call, “behind the scenes” pharmacy professionals that research, develop, assist in marketing and selling of medication/drugs. They even go further to established policies and regulations that guide drug/medication use and conduct of the pharmacy industry in the respective country. They could be in the public or private sector, depending on the roles played. It is fair to note that some of these types of pharmacists can overlap in the sense that a consultant pharmacist can be a clinical pharmacist, working by shifts or can own a pharmacy/drug store (community pharmacist). The types of pharmacists and how they overlap increasingly show the diversity of the professional field.

Mbalizi Institute of Health Sciences, Sunrise Campus-Mbozi offers Non-Diploma and Diploma programs for Pharmaceutical Sciences students seeking to be professionals of international repute in the field. Pharmacy in the Diploma Level is a 3-year program where a student studies Basic Technician Certificate in Pharmaceutical Sciences (NTA Level 4), Technician Certificate in Pharmaceutical Sciences (NTA Level 5) and Ordinary Diploma in Pharmaceutical Sciences (NTA Level 6) and Ordinary Diploma in Pharmaceutical Sciences (Upgrading) 1 year. As it stands.

Admission Criteria

Holders of Certificate of Secondary Education Examination (CSEE) with four (4) Passes in non-religious Subjects including “D” Passes in Chemistry and Biology. A Pass in Basic Mathematics and English Language is an added advantage.

Semester Tuition TZS)

Semester Tuition (USD)

Annual Tuition (TZS)

Annual Tuition (USD)

750,000

295

1,500,000

590

Tuition fee paid in four instalments per Year

Fee Structure

Semester Tuition (TZS)

Semester Tuition (USD)

Annual Tuition (TZS)

Annual Tuition (USD)

750,000

 

295

 

1,500,000

590

OTHER FEES PAYABLE ONCE

Item

Amount (TZS)

Detail

Uniform

140,000

Paid Once

Identity Card

6,500

Paid Once

Tanzania Pharmaceutical Handbook

55,000

Paid Once

T-Shirts

26,000

Paid Once

NACTE Verification Fee

20,000

Paid Once

Total

247,500

 

OTHER FEES PAYABLE PER YEAR TO THE INSTITUTION

Item

Amount (TZS)

Detail

Internal examination

150,000

Paid per Year

National Examination Fees

150,000

Paid per Year

Hospital and community pharmacy field work and research

100,000

Paid per Year

Hostel

200,000

Paid per Year

Graduation

50,000

Paid per Year

LOG/Procedure book

15,000

Paid per Year

Quality Assurance Fee for TCU/NACTE

15,000

Paid per Year

NHIF Fee

50,400                            

Paid per Year

CSSC

5,000

Paid per Year

TOTAL

735,400

 

 NACTE Exam Fee (National Examination for Allied Health Science students only 150,000/= to be paid in each second semester of the studies.

Graduation Fee 50,000/= to be paid by graduating students during registration period.

Career Opportunities

Career Areas of a Pharmacy Professional

Pharmacist (Industry/Hospital/ Clinical/ Commu nity)
Pharmacoepidemiologic/data analyst (An emerging field)
Retail/ Wholesale Chemist/Druggist Business
Drug Therapist
Drug Inspector & Analyst (Government Services)
Academicians (Teachers of Pharmacy)
Chemical / Drug Technician
Nuclear Pharmacy
Nutrition Support Pharmacy
Psychiatric Pharmacy
Oncology Pharmacy
Research & Development (Basic and Applied)
Pharmaceutical Industry (Production/ QA-QC/ Documentation)
Sales and Marketing
Member of regulatory organizations like FDA, WHO etc
Poison Control
Entrepreneurships opportunities concerning medicines of human beings and animals
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