2017 Annual Meeting
(145c) Pharmaceutical Engineering: Curricular Integration and a Liberal Arts Perspective on a Chemical Engineering Elective
Author
Based on instructor availability across the department, the Pharmaceutical Engineering elective course is typically offered every 2-3 years, and has included three offerings since the spring semester of 2011. Each time the class has been offered, it has been fully or nearly fully enrolled. Courses at Bucknell are the equivalent of four semester credit hours, thus the course meets four hours per week throughout the semester. In each instance, at least one two hour block of time is included in order to allow for a broad set of pedagogical approaches to be used. As an elective course, it is not used to specifically assess any ABET criteria; however, the approach used leads to that natural incorporation of almost all aspects of ABET âaâ through âkâ.
The course introduces students to the pharmaceutical industry through the lens of the FDA clinical approval process and pharmaceutical drug development. Group presentations are given both on pharmaceutical companies as well as specific pharmaceutical molecule products. These presentations provide a framework for a discussion of the historical, present and future contributions of the industry. Technical content is delivered in both lecture and problem based formats in areas that include crystallization, extraction, filtration and drying and each area specifically considers the related material and energy balances, materials science, fluid mechanics, heat and mass transfer, thermodynamics, unit operations and process design considerations. Social and humanistic aspects are introduced through both class discussion based on both readings and required documentaries, as well as formal classroom debates where two groups present the technical, economic and social considerations to a topic of current interest. The topical questions that have been considered in these formats include:
- What is the future of antibiotics?
- Should pharmaceutical products be directly advertised to consumers?
- Should pharmaceuticals be prescribed to critically ill patients outside of clinical trials?
Along with the positive outcomes of the class, lessons learned and recommendations both from the student and faculty perspective will be considered.