| Literature DB >> 30813453 |
Jouni Hirvonen1, Outi Salminen2, Katariina Vuorensola3, Nina Katajavuori4, Helena Huhtala5, Jeffrey Atkinson6.
Abstract
The Pharmacy Education in Europe (PHARMINE) project studies pharmacy practice and education in the European Union (EU) member states. The work was carried out using an electronic survey sent to chosen pharmacy representatives. The surveys of the individual member states are now being published as reference documents for students and staff interested in research on pharmacy education in the EU, and in mobility. This paper presents the results of the PHARMINE survey on pharmacy practice and education in Finland. Pharmacies have a monopoly on the dispensation of medicines. They can also provide diagnostic services. Proviisori act as pharmacy owners and managers. They follow a five-year (M.Sc. Pharm.) degree course with a six-month traineeship. Farmaseutti, who follow a three-year (B.Sc. Pharm.) degree course (also with a six-month traineeship), can dispense medicines and counsel patients in Finland. The B.Sc. and the first three years of the M.Sc. involve the same course. The current pharmacy curriculum (revised in 2014) is based on five strands: (1) pharmacy as a multidisciplinary science with numerous opportunities in the working life, (2) basics of pharmaceutical sciences, (3) patient and medication, (4) optional studies and selected study paths, and (5) drug development and use. The learning outcomes of the pharmacy graduates include (1) basics of natural sciences: chemistry, physics, technology, biosciences required for all the students (B.Sc. and M.Sc.), (2) medicine and medication: compounding of medicines, holism of medication, pharmacology and biopharmaceutics (side-effects and interactions), patient counseling, efficacy and safety of medicines and medication, (3) comprehensive and supportive interactions of the various disciplines of pharmacy education and research: the role and significance of pharmacy as a discipline in society, the necessary skills and knowledge in scientific thinking and pharmaceutical research, and (4) basics of economics and management, multidisciplinarity, hospital pharmacy, scientific writing skills, management skills. In addition, teaching and learning of "general skills", such as the pharmacist's professional identity and the role in society as a part of the healthcare system, critical and creative thinking, problem-solving skills, personal learning skills and life-long learning, attitude and sense of responsibility, and communication skills are developed in direct association with subject-specific courses. Professional specialization studies in industrial pharmacy, and community and hospital pharmacy are given at the post-graduate level at the University of Helsinki.Entities:
Keywords: European Union; Finland; education; pharmacy; practice
Year: 2019 PMID: 30813453 PMCID: PMC6473315 DOI: 10.3390/pharmacy7010021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacy (Basel) ISSN: 2226-4787
Numbers and activities of Finnish community pharmacists and pharmacies.
| Item | Number | Comments. |
|---|---|---|
| Community pharmacists | 772 M.Sc. pharmacists + 594 pharmacy owners = 1366 | There are additionally 3724 bachelor-level pharmacists working in community pharmacies. The total number of employees in community pharmacies is circa 8500. |
| Community pharmacies | 610 + 200 = 810 | 610 pharmacies and 200 subsidiary or branch pharmacies—the same medicines and services are available from both types of pharmacies. There are approximately 1 pharmacist (M.Sc.) and 4.5 bachelor pharmacists per pharmacy, and 6600 inhabitants per pharmacy. |
| Competences and roles of community pharmacists | Pharmacists work as the following: dispensing staff members pharmacy owners, managers, specialist pharmacists (after professional post-gradute studies). | |
| Ownership limited to pharmacists? | Yes | A license to own a pharmacy is granted to a person having a 5-year degree in pharmacy with a 6-month traineeship (M.Sc. Pharm.). |
| Are there rules governing the geographical distribution of community pharmacies? [ | Yes | The location of community pharmacies is based on the decision made by the Finnish Medicine’s Agency (FIMEA) ( |
| Are drugs and healthcare products available to the general public by other channels? | No | In Finland, medicines are sold to the public only from pharmacies, with the exception that nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) products may also be available in grocery shops. However, many pharmacies offer internet shop alternatives for healthcare products and over-the-counter drugs. |
Numbers and activities of other personnel working in pharmacies in Finland.
| Item | Number | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Are persons other than pharmacists involved in community practice? | Yes | These are pharmacy technicians. |
| Their titles and number(s) | 3486 | Pharmacy technicians with upper secondary vocational education (corresponds to “pharmacy assistants”) |
| Their qualifications | ||
| Organization providing and validating the education and training. | Upper secondary vocational education | |
| Duration of studies | 2–3 years | |
| Subject areas | Pharmacy technicians study logistics, accounting, and information technology (IT) skills. Education consists of theoretical studies and a larger part of in-house training. | |
| Competences and roles | Pharmacy technicians: |
Numbers and activities of hospital pharmacies and pharmacists in Finland.
| Item | Number | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| Number of hospital pharmacists | 696 | 605 (B.Sc.) + 91 (M.Sc.) |
| Number of hospital pharmacies | 154 | There are 24 hospital pharmacies that are in central hospitals and 81 medicine centers which are in other hospitals or healthcare centers. |
| Competences and roles of hospital pharmacists | In most hospitals, the hospital pharmacy or the medicine center is one of the medical service departments. The manager of a hospital pharmacy is required to have an M.Sc. in pharmacy, while the manager of a medicine centre is required to have an M.Sc. or B.Sc. in pharmacy. A manager of a hospital pharmacy or a dispensary is usually authorized by the medical director of the hospital. |
Pharmaceutical industry, and numbers and activities of pharmacists in industry and in other sectors in Finland.
| Pharmaceutical and Related Industries | ||
|---|---|---|
| Item | Number | Comment |
| Number of companies with production, research and development (R&D) and distribution | 4 | Pharmaceutical production: 1598 million € (m€) |
| Companies with production only | 3 | |
| Companies with distribution only | 2 | |
| Number of pharmacists working in industry | 400 M.Sc. and 400 B.Sc. | |
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| Number of pharmacists working in other sectors | 320 | This information is based on the report by Akava—Confederation of Unions for Professional and Managerial Staff in Finland in 2008 [ |
| Sectors in which pharmacists are employed | Academic sector, e.g., pharmacists working in universities and research organizations (160) | |
| Competences and roles of pharmacists employed in other sectors | Teaching, research, administration, management, and leadership | |
Professional associations for pharmacists in Finland.
| Item | Reply | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Registration of pharmacists | Yes. | Issued by Valvira (National supervisory authority for Welfare and Health) [ |
| Creation of community pharmacies and control of territorial distribution | Yes | Issued by Finnish Medicines Agency (FIMEA) [ |
| Ethical considerations | Yes | There is an advisory board on ethical issues in pharmacies based on the co-operation between Pharmacy Owners’ Association (AFP [ |
| Quality assurance and validation of higher-education institution (HEI) courses for pharmacists | No | The universities providing pharmacy education have their own quality handbooks and quality assurance procedures. In the University of Helsinki, for example, feedback is collected from students and internal and external/international audits are made regularly. |
Pharmacy higher-education institutions (HEIs), staff, and students in Finland.
| Item | Reply and/or Number | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Total number of HEIs for pharmacy | 3 | Helsinki, Kuopio, Turku. |
| Public HEIs | 3 | |
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| Independent faculty | Yes | University of Helsinki, Faculty of Pharmacy |
| Attached to a medical faculty | Yes | University of Eastern Finland, Faculty of Health Sciences, in Kuopio |
| Attached to a science faculty | Yes | Åbo Akademi University, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, in Turku |
| Do HEIs offer B.Sc. and M.Sc. degrees? | Yes | Universities of Helsinki and Eastern Finland |
| Do HEIs offer a M.Sc. Pharm. after a B.Sc. degree in another discipline? | Yes | |
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| Number of teaching staff (from Finland) | circa 260 | |
| Number of international teaching staff (from European Union (EU) MSs) | circa 30 | |
| Number of international teaching staff (non-EU) | circa 20 | |
| Number professionals (pharmacists and others) from outside the HEI, involved in education and training. | circa 50 | |
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| Places on entry after secondary school | 350 + 110 | The numbers are rounded. All students follow the same course for the first 3 years with 350 having the right to study only B.Sc. Pharm. (and taking up employment after graduating), and 110 going on for two further years to a M.Sc. Pharm. |
| Number of applicants for entry | 3000 | Approximately 6 applicants for 1 place. |
| Number that become professional pharmacists. | 350 B.Sc. + 110 M.Sc. | Around 350 take up employment after graduating B.Sc. and do not have the right to continue with the M.Sc. course. Around 110 continue with the M.Sc. course. |
| Number of international students (from EU member states (MS)) | circa 75 | Exchange students, mostly M.Sc. students |
| Number of international students (non-EU) | circa 20 | Exchange students, mostly M.Sc. students |
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| Specific pharmacy-related, national entrance examination | Yes | The same national entrance examination in pharmacy is used in all HEIs. |
| Is there a national numerus clausus? | No | Each institution sets its individual numerus clausus. |
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| At which level? | Some of the students have the right to pursue both B.Sc. and M.Sc. (Pharm.) degrees. Persons taken the B.Sc. (Pharm.) degree can apply to the Master’s level also later. | |
| Specific requirements for international students (EU or non-EU). | Language requirements in Finnish or Swedish for B.Sc. and M.Sc. | |
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| For home students | 0 | There are no tuition fees for national or international B.Sc. and M.Sc. (Pharm.) degree students. |
| For EU MS students | 0 | |
| For non-EU students | 0 | |
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| Number of teaching staff (from Finland) | circa 120 | |
| Number of international teaching staff (from EU MSs) | circa 20 | |
| Number of international teaching staff (non-EU) | circa 20 | |
| Number professionals (pharmacists and others) from outside the HEIs, involved in education and training. | circa 25 | |
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| Places on entry after secondary school | 143 + 60 | All students follow the same course for the first 3 years with 143 having the right to study only B.Sc. Pharm. (and taking up employment after graduating), and 60 going on for two further years to a M.Sc. Pharm. |
| Number of applicants for entry | 1500 | Approximately 7 candidates per place. |
| Number becoming professional pharmacists. | 150 + 50 | |
| Number of international students (EU) | 50 | Exchange students, mostly M.Sc. students |
| Number of international students (non-EU) | 10 | Exchange students, mostly M.Sc. students |
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| HEI has a specific pharmacy-related entrance examination | Yes | The same national entrance examination in pharmacy is used in all HEIs. |
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| At which level? | Some of the students have the right to pursue both B.Sc. and M.Sc. (Pharm.) degrees. Persons taken the B.Sc. (Pharm.) degree can apply to the Master’s level also later. | |
| Specific requirements for international students (EU/non-EU). | Language requirements in Finnish or Swedish for B.Sc. and M.Sc. degrees [ | |
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| Free for all B.Sc. and M.Sc. (Pharm.) degree students. | |
Specialization electives in pharmacy HEIs.
| Item | Reply and/or Number | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| Does your HEI provide specialized courses? | Yes | |
| In which years? | Both after completing the B.Sc. and the M.Sc. degree | |
| In which specialization (industry, hospital…)? | 1. Industrial pharmacy | |
| What are the student numbers in each specialization? | 20 | In both specialization programs, the yearly intake of Bachelors and Masters is altogether 20. |
Past and present changes in education and training in Finnish pharmacy HEIs.
| Item | Reply | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| Major changes before 2019 in Helsinki/Finland? | Yes | Four new positions for tenure track professors were appointed to the Faculty of Pharmacy. |
| Major changes envisaged in Helsinki/Finland? | Yes | The implementation of the new curriculum as a whole in the degree programs. |
Teaching and learning methods in student hours.
| Method | Year 1 | % | Year 2 | % | Year 3 | % | Year 4 * | Year 5 ** |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lecture | 427 | 72 | 223 | 22 | 98 | 12 | 160 | |
| Practicals | 36 | 6 | 189 | 19 | 46 | 6 | 0 | |
| Project work | 70 | 12 | 41 | 4 | 120 | 14 | 95 | |
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| Traineeship Community | 0 | 0 | 520 | 52 | 520 | 62 | 0 | |
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| Electives: choice | 61 | 28 | 49 | |||||
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* This represents only part of the M.Sc. course of the fourth and fifth years (see Section 4). ** The curriculum for year 5 varies student-specifically, so numbers of hours are not available. Note: “Practical” includes laboratory work and patient counseling practice. Project work includes all group work and excercises together with writing the thesis of B.Sc. (pharmacy) in the third year.
Subject areas (ECTS).
| Subject Area | Year 1 | % | Year 2 | % | Year 3 | % | Year 4 § | Total # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chemical | 10 ECTS | 21 | 15 ECTS | 11 | 220 h | |||
| Physical and | 3 ECTS | 5 | 2 ECTS | 3 | 56 h | |||
| Biological sciences | 10 ECTS | 13 | 12 ECTS | 14 | 203 h | |||
| Pharmaceutical | 5 ECTS | 5 | 5 ECTS | 8 | 112 h | |||
| Medical sciences | 23 ECTS | 32 | 11 ECTS | 6 | 4 ECTS | 7 | 276 h | |
| Law, ethics and societal sciences | 7 ECTS | 19 | 5 ECTS | 5 | 135 h | |||
| Generic subjects | 5 ECTS | 5 | 3 ECTS | 6 | 10 ECTS | 10 | 148 h | |
| Subtotal | 525 h | 475 h | 150 h | 255 h | 1150 h | |||
| Generic subjects + traineeship | 5 ECTS | 5 | 18 ECTS | 58 | 25 ECTS | 88 | 1188 h | |
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§ Notes for the 4th year studies: in the M.Sc. degree (120 ECTS), the students take 50 ECTS general studies (of which 20 ECTS are elective) and 70 ECTS major studies. The number of hours spent in every subject area in major studies varies from student to student. Due to this, it is difficult to give an average number of hours. The 30 ECTS of general, compulsory studies for every M.Sc. degree student include highly integrated studies in chemical, biological, medical, and societal sciences, together with pharmaceutical technology, pharmacoeconomics, and statistics. Due to the integrated nature of the studies, detailed information about the hours is not available. Therefore, only a sum of the hours of lectures, assignments, and group works is reported here. # Total hours by subject area are calculated for the years 1–3, the total hours include also the general, compulsory studies (30 ECTS) of fourth year. The percentage values are not informative and, therefore, are not reported here. The studies cover chemical, biological, and medical sciences, together with pharmaceutical technology, quite evenly throughout the first two years, with the emphasis on medical sciences in the first year. The third year is devoted mainly to generic substances together with traineeship. All the subject areas are covered in the studies of the fourth year in a highly integrated manner.
Figure 1A graphical representation of total hours over the studies of the first three years (B.Sc.) for the various subject areas.
Ways in which the Bologna declaration impacts on Finnish pharmacy HEIs.
| Bologna Principle | Is the Principle Applied? | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Comparable degrees/diploma supplement | Yes | Each graduating student receives a diploma supplement in English |
| 2. Two main cycles (B and M) with entry and exit at B level | Yes | We have a 3-year Bachelor and a 2-year Master program according to the Bologna Agreement. |
| 3. ECTS system of credits/links to LLL (life-long learning) | Yes | All our courses are built according to the ECTS system based on a yearly workload of 1600 h. We accept ECTSs obtained in other European countries to the full. Our students get ECTS points for the compulsory traineeship included in their degree. Since the traineeship is 6 months, the points given are 30, i.e., 5/month. All HEIs in Finland use ECTS-based credit points since 2005. |
| 4. Obstacles to mobility | Yes | The biggest obstacle to student mobility is the strictly organized curriculum, which does not easily allow students to move. If they are willing to prolong their studies by a half or one year, mobility becomes much easier. |
| 5. Erasmus staff exchange to HEI from elsewhere | Yes | Number of staff months: 0.25 |
| 6. Erasmus staff exchange from HEI to other HEIs | Yes | Number of staff months: 0.25 |
| 7. Erasmus student exchange to HEI from elsewhere | Yes | Number of student months: circa 250 |
| 8. Erasmus student exchange from HEI to other HEIs | Yes | Number of student months: circa 50 |
Ways in which elements of the European Commission (EC) directive (left column) impacts on Finnish pharmacy HEIs.
| The Directive States | How Does/Will This Directive Statement Affect Pharmacy Education and Training? |
|---|---|
| “Evidence of formal qualifications as a pharmacist shall attest to training of at least five years’ duration…” | This statement does not apply to the first-phase B.Sc. degree in Pharmacy. This statement was obviously taken into consideration when the curriculum for the M.Sc. (Pharm.) degree was developed in 2006. |
| “…four years of full-time theoretical and practical training at a university or at a higher institute of a level recognized as equivalent, or under the supervision of a university” | Master students study 4.5 years at the university, so this requirement is fulfilled. |
| “…six-month traineeship in a pharmacy which is open to the public or in a hospital, under the supervision of that hospital’s pharmaceutical department” | Both Bachelor and Master students perform the six-month traineeship. At least three months have to be spent in a community pharmacy and the remaining three months can be spent in a community or hospital pharmacy. |
| “The balance between theoretical and practical training shall, in respect of each subject, give sufficient importance to theory to maintain the university character of the training” | This point was object of intensive discussion during the degree reform according to Bologna. From the university point of view, we need to place emphasis on the theoretical knowledge in order to prepare the students for further studies (Ph.D.). |