ENTREPRENERSHIP SCENARIO AFTER PHARMACY EDUCATION_An Essay by M. Karthika
INTRODUCTION:
DEVELOPING
ENTREPRENEURIAL SKILLS IN PHARMACY STUDENTS
Entrepreneurship
as a scholarly field was defined as seeking to understand how opportunities to
bring into existence future goods and services are discovered, created, and
exploited, by whom, and with what consequences. In the modern economic
climate, entrepreneurship, or possessing entrepreneurial spirit, is critical
for driving innovation and creating a prosperous society. Its
concepts have been embraced by the wider public in recent years, where budding
entrepreneurs pitch their business plans to well-known business people in the
hope of securing investment.
In the
context of pharmacy, entrepreneurship is generally associated with the establishment
of community pharmacy and business management. However, entrepreneurship
and its associated skills are key to the development of a range of health
services in community and hospital sectors.In the United Kingdom,
examples of such enterprises include: repeat dispensing, medication management,
pharmacists prescribing medication, and minor ailment service. In
the United States, pharmacies also embrace such services to improve patient
adherence to medication. For example, medication therapy management
programs allow pharmacists to counsel patients on drugs, while interactive
voice recognition tools remind patients to order or pick up prescriptions.
Innovation is
a key component of the pharmaceutical industry and biomedical research. Every
drug or medicinal product developed and released to the market stems from an
intellectual curiosity that requires a proof of concept spanning years. Pharmacists
and health care professionals have a responsibility for the health and well-being
of the population, the so-called “social capital.”Therefore, pharmacists may
be defined as “social entrepreneurs” rather than the standard “business
entrepreneur,” for whom financial profit is key to successful enterprise.
A Viewpoint
by Brazeau in the American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education
outlined the importance of nurturing entrepreneurial spirit in pharmacy
undergraduates in order to advance future health care. She
asked whether accreditation standards were too specific to promote intellectual
curiosity and entrepreneurial spirit.
The General
Pharmaceutical Council (GPhC), responsible for the accreditation of the
master of pharmacy (MPharm) degree programs in the United Kingdom, states
students should be able to demonstrate skills relating to research and
development activities to improve health outcomes. Similar
key skills are required in the PharmD program in the United States, and schools
should possess “a vision for education, research, and other scholarly activities
that commits faculty and students to fostering innovation through basic and
applied research.”
Center for
the Advancement of Pharmacy Education’s (CAPE) Educational Outcomes outlines that, as part
of personal and professional development, students should “engage
in innovative activities by using creative thinking to envision better ways of
accomplishing professional goals.” Meetings, books, and continuing education
courses provide opportunities for qualified pharmacists to learn about business
and project management-related topics. The growing interest in raising
entrepreneurial awareness in pharmacy students is ongoing.
Innovative
community and hospital pharmacy services and pharmaceutical science are covered
in detail throughout Queen’s University Belfast (QUB) School
of Pharmacy’s MPharm degree via a range of teaching and assessment methods
such as lectures, objective structured clinical examinations (OSCEs), role-playing,
workshops, poster presentations, a final-year research project, and community and
hospital placements. However, until 2013, information relating to business
management and intellectual property were essentially only covered in lecture-based
teaching (passive learning) within the fourth-year
Business, Government and Industry aspect of the course. Moreover,
in the strictest sense, entrepreneurship has not been addressed within the
degree program at QUB, yet entrepreneurial skills are vital for the development
of undergraduate pharmacy students.
The pharmacy
degree requires a solid educational foundation to promote critical and lateral
thinking, problem solving (including study skills and team-working
skills), leadership skills, effective communication, and the analysis
and use of numerical data. For the benefit of student learning, a deeper
appreciation of what is required to be an effective entrepreneur is needed. The
best entrepreneurs not only were successful in starting their own business,
product, and/or service but were also fully prepared with regard to its
forward management. Entrepreneurs have an outward vision in order to recognize fully
the opportunity that confronts them and look forward in order to plan its
growth and future prospects.
From an
education perspective, entrepreneurial skills form a dual, interactive process,
where students develop an understanding of the strengths and weaknesses of
their ideas, and of themselves, in relation to the wider environment. Thus,
because of a deficit in the curriculum, we developed an interactive workshop on
the subject, involving fourth-year students. It was scheduled during the
last year of the degree pathway because these students have a greater
understanding than earlier-year students of all aspects of pharmacy and,
therefore, would presumably find it more meaningful. Furthermore,
in addition to nurturing entrepreneurial skills, the GPhC stipulates that
pharmacy students must be able to work effectively in a team, to develop other
team members through coaching and feedback, and to identify learning needs of
team members.The topic of entrepreneurship, as well as a workshop format,
lent themselves to teamwork.
The
hypothesis of this study was that entrepreneurship and entrepreneurial skills
could be effectively promoted and enhanced through a workshop-based
exercise. This workshop would allow the creation and development of a
pharmacy-related product or service that would finally be presented as an
oral sales pitch. Reports of such sales pitches are limited in the context of
pharmacy-based education but are a mainstay of business, marketing, and
economic practice. They form part of a series of pedagogical activities including
class projects, service projects to enhance learning, role-playing,
retention, and application of concepts and principles to the real world. In
business education, students experience higher levels of learning and engagement
when passive learning, such as lectures, are supplemented with experiential
proactive learning techniques, such as the development of products and services
and presenting/pitching them to an audience, and they result in stronger
connections between education and real world scenarios.
The overall learning objective was that, upon
completion of the workshop, the pharmacy students would gain an understanding
of entrepreneurial issues in the context of community, hospital, and industrial
pharmacy. Students would also develop a range of entrepreneurial-related
skills relating to problem solving, communication, teamwork, lateral thinking,
research, and recognizing opportunity.
In addition
to the workshop, a lecture was deemed necessary to introduce students to the
area of entrepreneurship in pharmacy, provide guidelines as to what was
expected in the workshop, and present a fully formulated case study using the
same template provided to the students . Students were advised that this level of
detail would be required for their sales pitch in the workshop. The lecture-based
teaching alone not fulfill student learning needs because lectures limit
opportunities for active involvement of students that task-centered,
problem-solving teaching methods provide. Lectures also reduce
potential for active “show how” knowledge and limit the ability to provide
feedback on student efforts.,
Template
for Formulating an Entrepreneurial Product*
The lecture and workshop were supplemented by an
entrepreneurial information booklet prepared by the authors, which outlined the
following: the definition of entrepreneurship and its context in the
MPharm pathway; intended learning outcomes and the format and structure of the
workshops ;preworkshop preparation required and the resources needed; format of
assessment and feedback; definitions of business terminology and guidance for
the generation and development of an entrepreneurial idea.
Establishing Opportunities for Entrepreneurship in
Pharmacy
Entrepreneurs are usually viewed as individuals who take
substantial risks to go out and start new companies, but most pharmacists go to
work for entities that are already established, such as a community pharmacy or
hospital. Such
positions are generally considered safe, as they promise a steady paycheck and
continued employment. For
that reason, entrepreneurship is not commonly listed among a pharmacist’s skill sets.All human beings were self-employed at the start of human history, but that
entrepreneurship was suppressed as civilized societies were formed.
In today’s
career landscape, the stability once offered by employers is no longer there. While there are many factors
influencing the potential for unemployment, the advance of technology and the
use of low-paid employees like pharmacy
technicians are the biggest threats to the current pharmacy field. Assuredly, their implementation will
shake up the traditional employment needs and model of pharmacy practice.
If we are concerned that these elements are a threat to your career ambitions,
then we should ensure we have the skills to prepare for the changing delivery
model of health care. As
Hoffman and Casnocha write in their book, “If we want to seize
the new opportunities and meet the challenges of today’s fractured career landscape, we need to think and act like
you’re running a start-up. The conditions in which entrepreneurs start and grow
companies are the conditions we all now live in when fashioning a career.”
The pharmacists
should view themselves as entrepreneurs throughout their career development. To do so, the following 3
recommendations should be incorporated
- Be paranoid. All great leaders fear that
they are one day away from losing their edge or business. Technologies that can impact
your standing are being developed and people who can do our job cheaper or
better are being trained, so what we can offer our employer or customer
might not be needed in the future. This scenario should generate
fear that drives us to keep changing and learning new things. Staying paranoid will keep your
knowledge, skills, and abilities sharp and competitive, as well as prepare
you for whatever the future has in store.
- Remember that all decisions
have risk. Some people say they do not want to become
entrepreneurs because making the decision to join a start-up is risky, but they fail to
realize that there is also risk in maintaining their current lifestyle and
position. All of us are one decision away from not being needed
or from getting replaced with someone better or cheaper. Thus, there is risk in staying
in a current position, just as there is risk in taking a new one.
- Find mentors. Each of us should have a
network of individuals with whom we can discuss new opportunities. Engaging with those who have
different backgrounds and experiences, in addition to those who are doing
what we want to do, is important for achieving success.
Pharmacists need to view themselves
as entrepreneurs and examine their individual careers as start-up companies. Those who do so will be prepared to succeed in the future
delivery model of health care and achieve professional satisfaction.
Entrepreneurship
development in pharmacy - need of the hour
The Pharmacy colleges in the country
are providers of knowledge and training in pharmaceutical operations to the
students but the colleges should create a mechanism by which the fullest
potential and zeal of the students is exploited. Entrepreneurship promotes to do something new,
develops the ability to take risks and helps in creating a new system of things. There is tremendous change in the economic scenario
of the country. Students should look forward towards creating their
own enterprise. Hence entrepreneurship promotes a vision for the
future and it is the need of the hour. This article deals with the scope and developmental
avenues of entrepreneurship in pharmacy academics in the country.
Pharmacy education in India has shown phenomenal growth after independence. There has been 200 fold increase in the pharmacy
colleges offering Diploma and Degree Programmes since 1947. The progress was possible due to private colleges
initiative. A large number of pharmacy colleges have come up
across the country offering sufficient number of seats in D. Pharm and B. Pharm. for increasing
aspirations of the students and parents. This success in growth was due to the combined and
collective efforts of AICTE, state governments, private entrepreneurs and many
others.
Due to surplus availability of pharma manpower, it will be beneficial and
appropriate if young pharmacy graduates seek out to exploit their full
potential by starting their own ventures and thus becoming job generators
rather than job seekers. Moreover the
salaries being paid to pharmacy graduates is also not attractive and are not on
par with other vocations. Hence this
necessitates the pharmacy colleges in the country to take necessary steps to
promote entrepreneurial learning programmes in the pharmacy curriculum so that
the pharmacy graduate coming out from the colleges can become self reliant and
inspire students towards self employment in their early career. Hence the pharmacy colleges should keep their
attention on developing a syllabi which not only produces trained manpower for
pharmaceutical industry but also produces self reliant entrepreneurial pharmacy
graduates which accelerates the process of economic development and growth of
the country.
Pharmacy entrepreneurship – immediate
need
A pharma technocrat through pharma entrepreneurship
can bring a radical change that can meet the challenges of emerging changes due
to liberalization and globalization. Fast changing
pharma industrial scenario, growing obsolescence in pharmacy curriculum
stresses the need for pharma entrepreneurship among the graduates. Pharmacy graduates have a strong bent of mind in
science and are capable of maximizing their skills if given the right training. Entrepreneurship development among the pharmacy
graduates will be an effective mechanism of renaissance in technology
innovations and industrial development of a nation.
Entrepreneurship development
The process of entrepreneurial development involves
providing all the inputs and information to a person for enterprise building
and sharpening his entrepreneurial skills. The necessary things to be taught are technical,
financial, marketing and managerial skills, Entrepreneurial attitude and
ability. The entrepreneurship development (ED) is an organized
tool for industrial development and a panacea for unemployment. The objective of ED is to motivate a person for
entrepreneurial career and to make him capable of perceiving and exploiting
successfully the opportunities for enterprise.
The small scale industry development organization established in India in 1964
looks and aims at entrepreneurship skill development, technology upgradation
and other issues related to small industries through a chain of small industries
service institutes located at different places of the country. The institutes which are involved in
entrepreneurship development, research and training are:
1. National
Institutes
. National Institute of Small Industry Extension
Training (NISIET)
. Entrepreneur Development Institute (EDI)
. National Institute for Entrepreneurship and Small
Business Development (NIESBUD)
. Indian Institute of Entrepreneurship (IIE)
2. Supporting
Institutions
. Nationalized Banks
. Co-operative Banks
. Small Industries Development Bank of India (SIDBI)
. Industrial Development Bank of India (IDBI)
. Industrial Credit and Investment Corporation of
India (ICICI)
. State Financial Corporation (SFC)
. National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD)
. Khadi and Village Industries Commission.
3. The
State (Regional
Institutes)
. Technical Consultancy Organizations (TCOs)
. Commissioner of Industries
. District Industries Centres
. Industries Corporations
. National Small Industries Corporation (NSIC)
. Non Governmental Organizations
Entrepreneurship
development cell
Every pharmacy college should launch an entrepreneurship development cell with a view to encourage students to consider self employment as a career option, provide training in entrepreneurship through modular courses and to teach the relevance of management. This cell will introduce the concept of entrepreneurship in curricula of pharmacy. It also facilitates self employment and entrepreneurship development through formal and non-formal programmes.
A faculty development programme can be conducted by the cell to develop professionals in entrepreneurship development so that they can act as resource persons in guiding and motivating the students to take up entrepreneurship as their career. This faculty development programme will provide a platform from which programmes, formal and informal can be conducted to support skill development activities particularly catering to specific areas of requirement, to identify and provide solutions for the problems of small business management and entrepreneurs, to provide training and retraining of entrepreneurs through variety of programmes and to train trainers, counsellors and motivators involved in the development of pharmaceutical entrepreneurship.
Conclusion
The need of the hour is to encourage more entrepreneurship in pharmaceutical sector so that the drugs and pharmaceuticals can be produced at affordable prices. Entrepreneurship has more scope for innovative ideas, problem solving attitude and creativity.
Every pharmacy college should launch an entrepreneurship development cell with a view to encourage students to consider self employment as a career option, provide training in entrepreneurship through modular courses and to teach the relevance of management. This cell will introduce the concept of entrepreneurship in curricula of pharmacy. It also facilitates self employment and entrepreneurship development through formal and non-formal programmes.
A faculty development programme can be conducted by the cell to develop professionals in entrepreneurship development so that they can act as resource persons in guiding and motivating the students to take up entrepreneurship as their career. This faculty development programme will provide a platform from which programmes, formal and informal can be conducted to support skill development activities particularly catering to specific areas of requirement, to identify and provide solutions for the problems of small business management and entrepreneurs, to provide training and retraining of entrepreneurs through variety of programmes and to train trainers, counsellors and motivators involved in the development of pharmaceutical entrepreneurship.
Conclusion
The need of the hour is to encourage more entrepreneurship in pharmaceutical sector so that the drugs and pharmaceuticals can be produced at affordable prices. Entrepreneurship has more scope for innovative ideas, problem solving attitude and creativity.
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