FPGEE Exam Questions Practice Test

A complete practice test to pass your Foreign Pharmacy Graduate Equivalency Examination

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FPGEE Exam Questions Practice Test

What You Will Learn!

  • Understand commonly used pharmacy law
  • Perform simple pharmacy math
  • Brand and generic equivalents
  • By the end of this course, you will be able to utilize the skills you have learned to achieve a job as a pharmacy technician.

Description

The Foreign Pharmacy Graduate Equivalency Examination (FPGE) is a pharmacy exam sat by Foreign Graduate Pharmacists who wish to become licensed to practice in the United States. The certification is accepted by 50 state boards of pharmacy as a means of documenting the educational equivalency of a candidate's foreign pharmacy education and licensure. The FPGEE is administered twice each year at Pearson VUE test sites throughout the continental United States.

The FPGEC Certification program or FPGEE is accepted by more than 48 state boards of pharmacy as a means of documenting the educational equivalency of a candidate’s foreign pharmacy education. Foreign educated pharmacists succesfully passed FPGEC certification are considered to have partially fulfilled eligibility requirements for licensure in those states that accept the Certification.Requirement Beginning January 1, 2003, FPGEE will require foreign-educated pharmacists to have earned their professional degree from a five-year curriculum program in order to apply for FPGEE or Foreign Pharmacy Graduate Examination CommitteeT (FPGEC®) Certification.This change affects only those candidates who earn a pharmacy degree after the 2003 deadline.The new curriculum FPGEE requirements do not apply to foreign-educated pharmacists who have earned a four-year degree prior to January 1, 2003. These individuals will remain eligible for FPGEE under the current program requirements of a four-year curriculum. This revision was prompted by the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education's (ACPE) decision to revise the standards for the entry-level pharmacy degree in the United States from a five-year baccalaureate degree in pharmacy to the six-year PharmD. All accredited US colleges and schools of pharmacy must meet the ACPE requirement by 2004. NABP President John A. Fiacco notes that "NABP has implemented this policy change in the FPGEE program to ensure consistency and equivalency in the educational curriculum of pharmacy programs." Approximately 40% of foreign pharmacy programs presently offer a five-year curriculum. It is hoped that more educational institutions will expand their programs to meet the FPGEE requirement.

The FPGEC Certification program or FPGEE is accepted by more than 48 state boards of pharmacy as a means of documenting the educational equivalency of a candidate’s foreign pharmacy education. Foreign educated pharmacists succesfully passed FPGEC certification are considered to have partially fulfilled eligibility requirements for licensure in those states that accept the Certification.

Who Should Attend!

  • Who wants to seat for FPGEE Exam

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Tags

  • Pharmacy

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