Pharmacy Law: Textbook & Review
Pharmacy Law: Textbook & Review Books
- ISBN13: 9780071486354
- Shape up: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
Product Description
A concise review of pharmacy law — ideal for coursework and MPJE® exam prep!
This accessible, real-world guide gets you ready for the do of pharmacy, even as giving you the proper training to be compliant with the law. To that end, the book expertly covers relevant laws, rules, and set of laws, and it highlights the distinctions between state and federal law where apt. In no other reference can you find such a succinct, yet thorough, review of the full range of federal pharmacy laws, including the Controlled Substances Act; the Food, Drug, and Blusher Act; the new Nutritional Supplement Health Education Act; the FDA Modernization Act; and the Medicare Modernization Act.
Features:
- Opening chapter on drug regulation and standards provides you with a matter-of-fact legal framework for later chapter material
- Overview of the drug approval administer and federal reporting programs
- Chapter on internet sales and FDA authority to act
- Coverage of opioid addiction treatment and narcotic treatment programs
- Comprehensive set of 450+ MPJE(R)-format do questions and answers
- A CD-ROM that reprises the do questions to provide a board-simulating interface
(20081118)
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Well, after reading this book (some sections more than once), and taking numerous do exams on the accompanying cd (and passing them consistently), I took the MPJE. I am not sure, but I doubt I passed. Even as the book was quite readable, and better than nothing, there are errors and omissions. Some exam questions were clearly incorrectly graded. Some info in the book was clearly incorrect, and answering questions on the MPJE based on erroneous in rank is a perilous thing. There may be errors beyond the ones I was able to identify myself, and these errors may have cost me points (I need EVERY one!!!!). Assuming I failed, I have ordered and will read the Barry Reiss book next and try again.
Rating: 2 / 5
I have been using this book and the Reiss/Hall pharmacy law book and have to say, this one was not as helpful. The questions in the back are not really similar to the kind of questions you get on the MPJE (in my attitude) and there was an entire section in the CSA section that was absolutely contradictory to the in rank on the DEA’s website…for example, this book says that oral prescriptions are permitted for schedules III-V ONLY in emergency situations…then goes on to cover the same thing that CII oral “emergency” prescriptions require. When I looked this up in the other book and on the DEA’s website of prescription requirements, it is stated that all III-V substances may be communicated orally, in writing, or by facsimile to a pharmacist, and may be refilled if so authorized on the Rx or call-in, without the stipulation of an “emergency situation.” Due to this type of misinformation I would not urge the book to anyone. They even have some answers in the back that are absolutely incorrect.
Rating: 2 / 5