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3/17/2016 Baton Rouge Community College Academic Affairs Master Syllabus

Date Approved: 28 June 2016

Registrar: Course Name: Advanced Dosage Calculations Lec-Lab-Credit: 0-8-2

BRCC Course Rubric: State Common Course Rubric: 2016: HPHM 2014 Prior to 2016: HPHM 2014 CIP Code 51.0805

Lecture: Lab: Course: Contact Hrs/Wk: 0 Contact Hrs/Wk: 8 Contact Hrs/Term 120 Credit hours: 0 Credit hours: 2 Credit Hours: 2

Course Description: Covers hospital pharmaceutical calculations. The course is designed to provide the pharmacy technician candidate with a foundation to work in a hospital setting and prepare for board exam questions related to calculations specific to a hospital pharmacy. This course covers the didactic and simulated components of some of the goals of the Standards and Guidelines of the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists (ASHP). This course has a lab fee.

Prerequisites: HPHM 1200, HPHM 1300, HPHM 1400, and HPHM 1503 Co-requisites: HPHM 1513, HPHM 2000, and HPHM 2013

Suggested Enrollment Cap: 20

Learning Outcomes: Upon successful completion of this course, the students will be able to: 1. Perform calculations required in pharmacies serving acute-care patient populations. 2. Utilize multi-step problem-solving techniques including error prevention. 3. Utilize the information on medication labels to calculate prescribed dosages. 4. Calculate pediatric and adult medication dosages based on body weight. 5. Calculate intravenous solution flow rates for elective and manual infusion systems.

Assessment Measures: Assessment of all learning outcomes will be measured using the following methods: 1. Assessment measures may include, but are not limited to, presentations, demonstrations, collaborative projects, in-class activities, in-putting prescription orders, patient information records, homework, quizzes, and exams.

Information to be included on the Instructor’s Course Syllabi:

 Disability Statement: Baton Rouge Community College seeks to meet the needs of its students in many ways. See the Office of Disability Services to receive suggestions for disability statements that should be included in each syllabus.

 Grading: The College grading policy should be included in the course syllabus. Any special practices should also go here. This should include the instructor’s and/or the department’s policy for make-up work. For example in a speech course, “Speeches not given on due date will receive no grade higher than a sixty” or “Make-up work will not be accepted after the last day of class.”

 Attendance Policy: Include the overall attendance policy of the college. Instructors may want to add additional information in individual syllabi to meet the needs of their courses.

 General Policies: Instructors’ policy on the use of things such as beepers and cell phones and/or hand held programmable calculators should be covered in this section.

 Cheating and Plagiarism: This must be included in all syllabi and should include the penalties for incidents in a given class. Students should have a clear idea of what constitutes cheating in a given course.

 Safety Concerns: In some programs this may be a major issue. For example, “No student will be allowed in the safety lab without safety glasses.” General statements such as, “Items that may be harmful to one’s self or others should not be brought to class.”

 Library/ Learning Resources: Since the development of the total person is part of our mission, assignments in the library and/or the Learning Resources Center should be included to assist students in enhancing skills and in using resources. Students should be encouraged to use the library for reading enjoyment as part of lifelong learning.

Expanded Course Outline:

1. Medication orders interpretation and processing prescriptions. (Goals 12, 21, 25, 36) 2. Determining the amount and type of diluent needed to reconstitute dry powder medications. (Goal 12). 3. Utilizing the information on medication labels to calculate prescribed dosages and inventory management. (Goals 12, 20) 4. Calculating medication amounts based on patient weight. (Goal 12, 25) 5. Intravenous infusion calculations. (Goal 12) 6. Calculating the prescribed concentration of a drug in solution. (Goal 12) 7. Continuous heparin infusion calculations. (Goal 12) 8. Finding the percent strength of a product when two volumes of given strengths of the same ingredient are combined. (Goal 12) 9. Alligation and Dilution calculations. (Goal 12) 10. Specific gravity calculations. (Goal 12) 11. Calculating either mass, volume, or density of a compound when given the other two. (Goal 12) 12. Recognizing errors in calculations. (Goal 12, 36) 13. Preventing errors in calculations. (Goal 12, 36) 14. Linking calculations, administration, and expected patient outcomes. (Goal 12)

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