Take Your Medicine: Developing New Drug Products

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Take Your Medicine: Developing New Drug Products provided by edX is a comprehensive online course, which lasts for 4 weeks long. Take Your Medicine: Developing New Drug Products is taught by Dr. Donna Kidwell, Dr. Alan Watts and Dr. Janet Walkow. Upon completion of the course, you can receive an e-certificate from edX. The course is taught in Englishand is Paid Course. Visit the course page at edX for detailed price information.

Overview
  • Medicine has eradicated or eased the symptoms of many diseases. This course reveals how new drugs go from research innovation to a medicine that can be prescribed to patients. You’ll learn the process, challenges and issues in developing pharmaceutical products. Drug development is a dynamic field where innovation and entrepreneurship are necessary to keep up with health care expectations, strict regulations and tightening development budgets. An overview of drug development, approval, and consumer issues will be presented and discussed in the context of research practices, science, marketing, public welfare and business.

    Participants from all backgrounds and interest, including scientists, healthcare professionals, entrepreneurs and the general public, are encouraged to participate.

Syllabus
  • Week 1: Drug Development Overview
    An overview of the various phases of the drug development pathway, highlights of medical innovations and discussion of the changing landscape for new products

    Week 2: Discovery & Preclinical Phases
    Greater detail on the discovery and preclinical development, drug repurposing, formulating & testing drug products and how an academic researchers contributed to finding an antidote to anthrax

    Week 3: Clinical Trials & Regulations
    The clinical trial phases and challenges, how cancer therapies are developed, FDA’s perspective on new product approvals

    Week 4: Patient Safety, Manufacturing & University Innovations
    FDA role to ensure patient safety, how manufacturers assure the medicine you take is what it is supposed to be, the importance of university research to develop novel medicines