ENTREPRENEURESHIP SCENARIO AFTER THE PHARMACY EDUCATION_Essay by Ankit Joshi
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 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 modern economic climate, entrepreneurship, or
possessing entrepreneurial spirit, is critical for driving innovation and
creating a prosperous society.
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. But
now days the scenario little changed and Pharma graduates become more focused
on entrepreneurship.
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.
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 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 are 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
syllabus 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.
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.
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.
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, counselors
and motivators involved in the development of pharmaceutical entrepreneurship.
There is an increasing need for entrepreneurial
skills in health care to encourage the creation of new and innovative
health-related services, technologies, and therapies. Skills including peer
assessment, peer development, communication, critical evaluation, creative
thinking, problem solving, and numeracy were developed. Overall, it served as
an effective teaching tool for the promotion of entrepreneurship in the
pharmacy degree and could be easily adapted to other university programs.
I believe that pharmacists should view themselves
as entrepreneurs throughout their career development. After getting
professional course one can use all information and aim toward entrepreneur to
create opportunities.
Comments
Post a Comment