| Literature DB >> 18397530 |
Rosemin Kassam1, Gary Poole, John B Collins.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pharmacy schools across North America have been charged to ensure their students are adequately skilled in the principles and practices of pharmaceutical care. Despite this mandate, a large percentage of students experience insufficient opportunities to practice the activities, tasks and processes essential to pharmaceutical care. The objective of this retrospective study of pharmacy students was to: (1) as "proof of concept", test the overall educational impact of an enhanced advanced pharmacy practice experiential (APPE) model on student competencies; (2) develop an instrument to measure students' and preceptors' experiences; and (3) assess the psychometric properties of the instrument.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18397530 PMCID: PMC2375875 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6920-8-17
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Community-based advanced pharmacy practice experience activities
| 1. Asking about patient expectations | 1. Assess patients with new prescriptions and develop care plans to resolve/prevent drug-related problems | |
| 2. Collecting relevant information | 2. Assess patients with refill prescriptions and develop care plans to resolve/prevent drug-related problems | |
| 3. Integrating patient information | 3. Present and discuss 1 prescription AND 1 non-prescription drug class with preceptor | |
| 4. Evaluating different treatment options | 4. Provide pharmaceutical care patients requesting non-prescription products, develop care plan for all interventions | |
| 5. Documenting patient info: continuity of care | 5. Provide follow-up to patients encountered in activities # 1, 2, 4 and 9, document follow-up care | |
| 6. Prioritizing drug related problems | 6. Provide drug information to patients, preceptors and other health care providers, document all recommendations | |
| 7. Determining patient experiences: effectiveness or undesirable effects of current medications | 7. Shadow another health care professional for 1/2 to 1 day, complete the reflection page | |
| 8. Determining whether patients were managing and adhering to their medication regimes | 8. Discuss pharmacy practice issues related to pharmaceutical care (barriers and opportunities | |
| 9. Establishing monitoring parameters with patients | 9. Provide comprehensive pharmaceutical care by assessing all drug-related needs of your patient, identify drug-related problems and develop care plans to resolve/prevent drug-related problems | |
| 10. Following-up patients by phone or in-person | 10. Initiate and complete a patient care project, submit a summary of your project | |
| 11. Developing professional relationships: with other health care providers, physicians | ||
| 12. Participating in clinics, seminars, projects or presentations | ||
| 13. Providing basic and comprehensive pharmaceutical care | ||
Student and preceptor results for the 5-component learning model
| Students' | Control APPE | 3.87 | 1.21 | ns |
| Enhanced APPE | 4.21 | |||
| Preceptors' | Control APPE | 3.73 | 1.89 | ns |
| Enhanced APPE | 4.07 | |||
| Students' | Control APPE | 3.76 | 0.34 | ns |
| Enhanced APPE | 3.82 | |||
| Preceptors' | Control APPE | 3.50 | 1.56 | ns |
| Enhanced APPE | 3.79 | |||
| Students' | Control t APPE | 5.30 | 7.29 | p < 0.000 |
| Enhanced APPE | 16.65 | |||
| Preceptors' | Control APPE | 8.74 | 5.65 | p < 0.000 |
| Enhanced APPE | 17.50 | |||
| Students' | Control APPE | 3.50 | 3.05 | p < 0.004 |
| Enhanced APPE | 4.21 | |||
| Preceptors' | Control APPE | 3.22 | 3.81 | p < 0.001 |
| Enhanced APPE | 4.12 | |||
| Students' | Control APPE | 4.03 | 2.41 | p < 0.021 |
| Enhanced APPE | 4.39 | |||
| Preceptors' | Control APPE | 4.16 | 0.86 | ns |
| Enhanced APPE | 4.31 | |||
| Students' | Control APPE | 3.78 | 2.33 | p < 0.026 |
| Enhanced APPE | 4.16 | |||
| Preceptors' | Control APPE | 3.68 | 2.67 | p < 0.011 |
| Enhanced APPE | 4.07 | |||
Competency domains for learning pharmaceutical care principles and delivery:Overall, enhanced (treatment) and traditional (control) scores for students and preceptors combined.
| Asking about patient expectations | 3.84 | 76.9 | 82.1 | 74.0 | 0.005 |
| Collecting relevant information | 4.38 | 87.6 | 91.3 | 85.5 | 0.036 |
| Integrating patient information | 4.08 | 81.6 | 89.0 | 77.6 | 0.000 |
| Evaluating different treatment options | 4.18 | 82.5 | 87.4 | 79.7 | 0.010 |
| Documenting patient info: continuity of care | 3.91 | 78.3 | 85.4 | 74.3 | 0.001 |
| Prioritizing drug related problems | 3.97 | 79.4 | 84.6 | 76.5 | 0.002 |
| Determining patient experiences: effectiveness or undesirable effects of current medications | 4.23 | 84.6 | 88.5 | 82.4 | 0.023 |
| Determining whether patients were managing and adhering to their medication regimes | 4.17 | 83.4 | 87.2 | 81.3 | 0.022 |
| Establishing monitoring parameters with patients | 3.95 | 78.9 | 86.2 | 74.9 | 0.000 |
| Following-up patients by phone or in-person | 3.90 | 77.9 | 85.8 | 73.6 | 0.000 |
| Developing professional relationships: with other health care providers, physicians | 3.47 | 69.5 | 69.2 | 69.6 | ns |
| Participating in clinics, seminars, projects or presentations | 1.99 | 39.9 | 37.6 | 41.1 | ns |
| Providing basic and comprehensive pharmaceutical care | 4.14 | 82.7 | 88.0 | 79.8 | 0.001 |
| Overall Index of Content Domain Learning | 3.86 | 77.2 | 81.7 | 74.6 | 0.001 |
a Indicates significance of the differences observed between the enhanced (treatment) versus traditional (control)
Alpha-reliability coefficients, convergent and discriminant estimates for original study scales.
| Learning Climate & Preceptor Support | 3.92 | 0.69 | 9 | 0.884 | 0.549 | 0.110 | 0.305 |
| Learning Opportunities | 3.69 | 0.55 | 17 | 0.884 | 0.574 | 0.162 | 0.180 |
| Patient Consultations (estimated number) | 10.67 | 6.66 | 1 | 0.475e | 0.475 | -0.0168 | 0.520 |
| Skills Improvement | 3.68 | 0.73 | 17 | 0.938 | 0.476 | 0.118 | 0.510 |
| Attitude Enhancement | 4.19 | 0.46 | 29 | 0.939 | 0.479 | -0.052 | 0.261 |
| Overall Study Model Scale (original) | 3.87 | 0.47 | 70 | 0.959 | 0.816 | 0.121 | 0.410 |
αa – Cronbach's alpha-reliability, and the index of convergent validity; how well do items converge on each scale's central concept.
rb – Highest correlation with any other scale. Low correlations mean the scale does not duplicate information in other scales.
c – Pearson r with preceptor vs. student. Non-significant r's indicate absence of bias.
d – Pearson r (or eta) with study arm. Positive correlations indicate sensitivity to predicting enhanced clerkship.
e – Since the patient consultation estimate was a single variable measure, its α-reliability estimate is its SMR with the other four indices.
Psychometric properties of revised learning model scales.
| Learning Model: Refined Scales | Mean | Standard Deviation | Number of Items | αa | rb | Scale Biasc | Scale Sensitivityd |
| Preceptor Support | 3.94 | 0.69 | 6 | 0.847 | 0.510 | 0.104 | 0.336 |
| Learning Opportunities | 4.00 | 0.62 | 6 | 0.837 | 0.510 | 0.214 | 0.304 |
| Patient Consultations (estimated number) | 10.67 | 6.66 | 1 | 0.475 | 0.580 | -0.182 | 0.715 |
| Skills Improvement | 3.65 | 0.86 | 6 | 0.873 | 0.520 | 0.093 | 0.622 |
| Attitude Enhancement | 4.03 | 0.65 | 6 | 0.837 | 0.520 | -0.157 | 0.393 |
| Overall Study Model Scale (refinedf) | 3.89 | 0.56 | 25 | 0.920 | 0.796 | 0.057 | 0.574 |
| Overall Study Model Scale (original)f | 3.87 | 0.47 | 70 | 0.959 | 0.816 | 0.121 | 0.410 |
αa – Cronbach's alpha-reliability, and the index of convergent validity; how well do items converge on each scale's central concept.
rb – Highest correlation with any other scale. Low correlations mean the scale does not duplicate information in other scales.
c – Pearson r with preceptor vs. student. Non-significant r's indicate absence of bias.
d – Pearson r (or eta) with study arm. Positive correlations indicate sensitivity to predicting enhanced clerkship.
e – Since the patient consultation estimate was a single variable measure, its α-reliability estimate is its SMR with the other four indices.
f – Both Refined and Original scales are listed to document that streamlining resulted in no appreciable loss of scale power and efficiency.
Refined scale composition with the six best-discriminating items per scale.
| Number of patient Consulted: (F = 41.35, p < 0.000)*. | • Estimated number of consultations. |
| Learning Climate: (F = 3.88, p < 0.026). | • Preceptor encouraged patient follow-up. |
| Learning Opportunities: (F = 3.23, p < 0.046). | • Document patient information in forms usable by other pharmacists. |
| Skills Improvement: (F = 20.69, p < 0.000). | • Provide follow-up (phone or in-person) using the monitoring plan. |
| Attitude Enhancement: (F = 6.86, p < 0.002). | • Disagrees: Follow-up is too time-consuming. |
* F and p values indicate the significance with which each scale discriminated between enhanced and control experiences.