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Staro 27.08.2010, 13:57
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Magelan Magelan je offline
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Datum prijave: 28.04.2010
US lokacija: Spartanburg, South Carolina; Jacksonville, Florida
YU lokacija: Mladenovac, Republika Srbija
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"It can be difficult for graduates of international pharmacy degree programs to obtain a pharmacy license in the U.S. because most non-U.S. pharmacy schools only offer the equivalent to a bachelor's degree. All new pharmacy degree graduates in the U.S. must earn a doctor of pharmacy (Pharm.D.) degree. Foreign pharmacy graduates that wish to practice in the U.S. must complete the Foreign Pharmacy Graduate Examination Certification (FPGEC®). FPGEC provides a means of documenting the educational equivalency of a candidate's foreign pharmacy education. Foreign-educated pharmacists must earn their professional degree from a five-year curriculum program in order to apply for FPGE Certification. Questions regarding equivalency exams (FPGEC®) and licensure for graduates of foreign pharmacy programs should be directed to:

The National Association of Boards of Pharmacy
1600 Feehanville Drive
Mount Prospect, IL 60056
847-391-4406
Fax: 847-391-4502
[url]http://www.nabp.net/[/url]

Many states have additional testing requirements and you should contact the Board of Pharmacy in the state that you will be practicing to learn more. The NABP Web site provides contact information for each state board."

[url]http://www.aacp.org/resources/student/pharmacyforyou/admissions/Pages/default.aspx[/url]

Prostudiraj malo ovo, mada bi najbolje bilo da ih kontaktiras.