I've been studying for my CPhT for about 5 weeks and pharmaceutical calculations are wrecking me. I'm scoring around 73% overall but when I isolate the math sections I'm down to 61%. IV flow rates, days supply calculations, and concentration adjustments feel like they should be simple but I keep making errors under timed conditions. I'm working as a pharmacy clerk so I see some of this daily, but the exam format trips me up.
The law and regulations section is actually my strongest at 82% — not what I expected. Pharmacology knowledge is middle of the road at around 71%. I need at least a 650 on the PTCE scale to pass and practice exams are putting me right at the borderline with 3 weeks left.
I found a CPhT practice test with some useful timed math drills but I'm wondering if there's a better approach to calculation questions specifically. Should I be memorizing formulas or focusing on dimensional analysis? My coworker who passed last year said she didn't bother memorizing formulas at all.
Don't neglect the sterile compounding questions — those have gotten more prominent on the PTCE in the last couple years and some people are caught off guard by how technical they get.
73% overall with 3 weeks left is a solid position. Do 20 calculation problems every single day and you'll see the scores move. The repetition genuinely works on this type of content.
Days supply tripped me up too. The key is being precise about what dispense-as-written means for different dosage forms. Inhalers and eye drops have specific counting rules that aren't intuitive if you haven't drilled them explicitly.
Your coworker is right. Dimensional analysis is the way — once you get the method down you don't need separate formulas for every calculation type. It takes about a week of focused practice to click but then it's reliable under pressure.
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