Sizolwethu N completed this course and earned a Pharmuni certificate.

Certificate Registration No.: 12 100 60610 TMS
Introduction to Good Distribution Practices explains how pharmaceutical products must be stored, transported, and handled in a controlled way to protect their quality, safety, and efficacy throughout the supply chain. This course introduces the principles of GDP and shows how quality assurance, traceability, storage conditions, transport controls, and risk management work together to support compliant pharmaceutical distribution.
You will gain a practical understanding of how GDP applies across the pharmaceutical supply chain, from manufacturers and wholesalers to logistics providers and storage facilities. The course explores the role of GDP in protecting product quality, the relationship between QA and GDP, traceability systems for recalls, cold chain and storage controls, transport and handling expectations, and common distribution risks such as temperature excursions, shock damage, delays, and contamination.
The course focuses on key aspects of Good Distribution Practices in practice, including:
• The core principles and purpose of GDP in pharmaceutical distribution
• Quality assurance, training, and traceability across the supply chain
• Storage, cold chain management, and GDP-compliant transport handling
• Common distribution risks and strategies to prevent product loss or compliance failures
Through structured explanations and practical examples, this course helps learners understand how distribution controls support product integrity and patient safety after products leave manufacturing. It is best suited to professionals working in logistics, warehousing, quality assurance, supply chain management, regulatory compliance, or pharmaceutical distribution activities.
This course will help you understand the unique requirements of pharmaceutical distribution compared to general logistics. It will build your awareness of how quality assurance, traceability, storage, transport, and risk management all contribute to Good Distribution Practice (GDP) compliance. Throughout the course, you will also learn from real-life industry examples and gain insights on how to avoid common pitfalls. By the end of this course you will be able to: