Quote:
Originally Posted by Street Pharmacist
No, it's that standards are very different in other countries.
Pharmacists trained in India get a different curriculum than us. We get mostly clinical, they get more pharmaceutical (like making and studying drugs).
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Of course, but it would take a few hours to do a basic check of educational standards, a few months more to run an in depth check that would either allow or not allow a university course in any other country be checked by a professional body here, after that anyone from the University aught to be considered qualified, most of what stops foreign qualifications from being accepted is an attempt to keep a closed shop to keep wages higher.