![]() ![]() I absolutely recommend you check your syllabus right away. Obviously this is a very broad overview designed to give you a quick idea. Antimicrobials, antiviral and antineoplastics drugs.Blood: anticoagulants, thrombolytics etc.Endocrine drugs: thyroid issues, diabetes and sex disorders etc.Cardiovascular drugs: for heart failure, angina and blood pressure etc.Autonomic, peripheral and central nervous system drugs: things like muscle relaxants, anesthetics and anti-inflammatories.General pharmacology: here you’ll learn about routes of drug administration, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, drug trials etc.Just to quickly break things down (so you get an idea of where you’ll be going), you’ll study pharmacology across the following areas: Save that time for something else fun (or easier to score a higher GPA in). You’ll cover the entire course again (probably more in-depth) during your pre-clinical years. Especially as biochem and nutrition has about the same percentage make-up (14-24%)… So Should I Take Pharmacology Before Med/Nursing School? Perhaps that takes the pressure off a bit. Its representation on USMLE Step 1, according to the official guidelines, is just 15-22% (compared to pathology’s 44-52%). What Percentage of Step 1 is Pharmacology?ĭespite its difficulty, there is some good news when it comes to pharmacology in med school. Interestingly, many students who’ve passed through both pharmacy and medical school, usually agree the subject is tougher during MBBS. So if you struggled with A&P first time around (no shame in that), you could find pharmacology even more challenging. Especially in terms of drug mechanisms and interactions. Something else pharm does a lot of is revisiting physiology. So you’re effectively doing double the work covering microbiology, oncology and pathology at the same also. While every bacteria, virus, fungi and oncological disease does too. To get some idea of how “hard” it is, remember that each organ system (cardiovascular etc.) has its own related pharmacology. It just requires hundreds of hours of study and memorization. But not because it’s difficult (it’s not). Yes, pharmacology is one of the toughest classes. Ask students in the years above you for tips/best practices: they’ll know your examiners best.Īnd now for some other burning questions… Is Pharmacology Hard?.Be confident in your ability to self study: you can learn pharm independently of your lectures or seminars (if they’re not mandatory).Concept map: spend at least one part of your study session mapping out drug connections on paper/ whiteboard/tablet (it’ll help you make faster associative connections).Avoid resource fever: limit your references to a couple or few reputable sources. ![]()
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