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Is it difficult to test the competent pharmacist (intermediate) or the professional pharmacist?
I have taken these two exams, with different emphases. The pharmacist in charge focuses on the hospital pharmacy. The four questions are not really medical, and there are almost no drug points (the so-called drug points are the quality control in drugs, and there is no instrumental analysis and chemical analysis), the whole pharmacological questions (which permeate the relevant knowledge of patients and immunity) and some drugs (I don't remember the legal questions). The topic is very biased, and it is possible to test several questions in succession for the same content. However, I don't think passing is a problem. There must be a lot of original questions in the reference materials every year. My average score in four courses is exactly 80.

The licensed pharmacist exam is relatively general, and the questions are rarely not so biased, but the knowledge points are widely covered, and the questions are strictly in accordance with the outline, depending on the effort of review. I have passed two years, and the second knowledge is difficult to understand, and the questions of medicinal chemistry are also difficult to answer. I must have the ability to recognize the structural formula of drugs.