| Literature DB >> 30310347 |
Siritree Suttajit1, Puckwipa Suwannaprom1, Teeraporn Supapaan2, Suntara Eakanunkul3, Mayuree Tangkiatkumjai4, Chuenjid Kongkaew5, Claire Anderson6, Payom Wongpoowarak7.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To serve the higher demands of pharmaceutical services, pharmacy education in Thailand has shifted from 5-year BPharm program to 6-year PharmD program with two specialization tracks: pharmaceutical care (PC) and industrial pharmacy (IP). This study aimed to compare the perceptions regarding professional competencies, pharmacy profession, and planned workplace between graduates with 5-year BPharm and 6-year PharmD and between those with PC and IP specialty.Entities:
Keywords: PharmD curriculum; Thailand; attitude; competency; pharmacy education; transition
Year: 2018 PMID: 30310347 PMCID: PMC6167127 DOI: 10.2147/AMEP.S173014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Med Educ Pract ISSN: 1179-7258
Perceived professional core competencies (six domains) of Thai pharmacy graduates (N=1,744)
| Confident in professional core competencies | Who agreed and strongly agreed, n | % |
|---|---|---|
| Concern on patient-centered care | 1,666 | 95.5 |
| Provide on-site services during service hours | 1,627 | 93.3 |
| Follow basic moral standards | 1,575 | 90.3 |
|
| ||
| Provide dispensing and counseling at an outpatient unit | 1,451 | 83.2 |
| Perform drug use evaluation and promote rational drug use | 1,436 | 82.3 |
| Screen prescriptions | 1,395 | 80.0 |
| Manage adverse drug reactions | 1,373 | 78.7 |
| Perform medical reconciliation | 1,320 | 75.7 |
| Provide clinical services at an inpatient unit | 1,233 | 70.7 |
| Advice on herbal and alternative medicines | 1,067 | 61.2 |
|
| ||
| Communicate and educate patients and health care team | 1,489 | 85.4 |
| Provide appropriate drug and health information | 1,472 | 84.4 |
| Work with interdisciplinary health care team | 1,441 | 82.3 |
| Develop a work project and resources planning | 1,337 | 76.8 |
| Manage on medication system for rational drug use | 1,277 | 73.2 |
| Understand about hospital accreditation | 1,112 | 63.8 |
| Participate in improving the hospital’s information technology system | 1,063 | 61.0 |
|
| ||
| Apply knowledge of pharmaceutical dosage forms on drug selection and clinical practice | 1,434 | 82.2 |
| Prepare non-sterile pharmaceutical regimens for single patient use | 1,210 | 69.4 |
| Apply knowledge of pharmacopeias and certificate of analysis in drug selection | 1,177 | 67.5 |
| Apply knowledge of medicinal chemistry on drug selection and clinical practice | 1,137 | 65.2 |
| Apply knowledge of pharmaceutical quality control on drug selection and clinical practice | 1,065 | 61.1 |
| Manage medical system for drug storage, packing, and distribution | 1,017 | 58.3 |
|
| ||
| Perform home health care services and primary care services | 1,188 | 68.1 |
| Conduct interventions to solve public health problems in rural community | 1,146 | 65.7 |
| Conduct proactive primary health care services | 1,074 | 61.6 |
| Conduct a consumer health protection services: pre-marketing control | 1,021 | 58.5 |
| Conduct a consumer health protection services: post-marketing control | 1,018 | 58.4 |
|
| ||
| Understand drug laws and regulations | 1,135 | 65.1 |
| Understand good pharmaceutical practice | 1,087 | 62.3 |
| Understand pharmaceutical manufacturing, industry level | 999 | 57.3 |
| Understand drug development process | 932 | 53.4 |
| Understand drug regulation and product registration process | 927 | 53.2 |
| Develop pharmaceutical formulary | 896 | 51.4 |
| Develop a research protocol | 877 | 50.3 |
Respondent self-perception and perceptions toward pharmacy profession (N=1,744)
| Perceptions | n | % |
|---|---|---|
| Proud to be a pharmacist | 1,613 | 92.5 |
| Apply knowledge and skills in real-world practice | 1,543 | 88.5 |
| Confident in performing tasks as a pharmacist-in-charge | 1,502 | 86.1 |
| Apply knowledge and skills to solve organizations’ problems | 1,412 | 81.0 |
| Computer skill | 1,234 | 70.8 |
| Life-long learning | 1,145 | 65.7 |
| English skill | 876 | 50.2 |
| Intend to pursue for postgraduate study | 848 | 48.6 |
|
| ||
| Pharmacy profession contributes to patients’ health | 1,591 | 91.2 |
| Pharmacy profession contributes to rational drug use | 1,582 | 90.7 |
| Pharmacy profession has honor and is recognized by other professions | 1,471 | 84.4 |
| Professional peers have good relationship and support each other | 1,402 | 80.4 |
| Pharmacy professional organizations are strong and reliable | 1,197 | 68.6 |
| 6-year program worth for future career | 1,300 | 74.5 |
| Intend to continue working in the preferred job without changing | 1,127 | 64.6 |
| Willing to be a preceptor | 1,095 | 62.8 |
| Pharmacy profession gained confidence from the public | 859 | 49.3 |
Note:
Those answered 4 (agree) and 5 (strongly agree) in 5-point Likert scale.
Respondent characteristics (n=1,744)
| Characteristics | n | % |
|---|---|---|
| Gender | ||
| Female | 1,301 | 74.6 |
| Male | 443 | 25.4 |
| Pharmacy program | ||
| 6-year Doctor of Pharmacy (PharmD) | 1,270 | 72.8 |
| 5-year Bachelor of Pharmacy (BPharm) | 474 | 27.2 |
| Specialty track | ||
| Pharmaceutical care | 1,154 | 66.2 |
| Industrial pharmacy | 590 | 33.8 |
| University | ||
| Public | 1,202 | 68.9 |
| Private | 481 | 27.6 |
| Unidentified | 61 | 3.5 |
| GPA, mean (SD) | 3.06 (0.43) | |
| Age (years), mean (SD) | 25.0 (2.6) |
Abbreviation: GPA, grade point average.
Graduates’ planned workplace
| Planned workplace | First rank
| Second rank
| Third rank
| Total score | Average total score | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| n | % | N | % | n | % | |||
| Hospital | 626 | 35.9 | 240 | 13.8 | 158 | 9.1 | 2,516 | 35.8 |
| Community pharmacy | 288 | 16.5 | 671 | 38.5 | 174 | 10.0 | 2,380 | 33.9 |
| Pharmaceutical sales and marketing | 121 | 6.9 | 108 | 6.2 | 217 | 12.4 | 796 | 11.3 |
| Pharmaceutical industry | 100 | 5.7 | 74 | 4.2 | 157 | 9.0 | 605 | 8.6 |
| University lecturer | 27 | 1.6 | 56 | 3.2 | 180 | 10.3 | 37.3 | 5.3 |
| Product regulation and consumer protection | 24 | 1.4 | 39 | 2.2 | 207 | 11.9 | 357 | 5.1 |
| 7,027 | 100 | |||||||
Notes:
Total score = (n of first rank × 3) + (n of second rank × 2) + (n of third rank × 1).
Average total score = total score × 100/sum of total score.
Differences in perceptions and planned workplace of graduates from 5-year BPharm to 6-year PharmD program with specialty tracks
| Perceptions | Odds ratio | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6-year PharmD program | Pharmaceutical care track | |||
| Professional ethics | 2.64 | ( | 0.94 | (0.62, 1.42) |
| Pharmaceutical care services | 0.80 | (0.56, 1.13) | 2.29 | ( |
| Primary health care and consumer protection | 0.77 | (0.55, 1.09) | 1.36 | ( |
| System management | 1.05 | (0.747, 1.48) | 1.31 | ( |
| Medication selection and procurement | 1.25 | (0.89, 1.76) | 0.62 | ( |
| Pharmaceutical industry | 1.07 | (0.75, 1.53) | 0.46 | ( |
| Proud to be a pharmacist | 1.95 | ( | 1.29 | (0.85, 1.94) |
| Confident in performing tasks as a pharmacy in charge | 1.85 | ( | 1.007 | (0.728, 1.39) |
| Pharmacy profession contributes to patients’ health | 3.28 | ( | 0.73 | (0.48, 1.12) |
| Pharmacy profession contributes to rational drug use | 2.48 | ( | 0.84 | (0.56, 1.25) |
| 6-year program worth for future career | 1.67 | ( | 1.70 | ( |
| Retention in preferred job | 1.07 | (0.75, 1.55) | 1.71 | ( |
| Willingness to be a preceptor | 1.33 | (0.93, 1.90) | 1.67 | ( |
| Hospital | 1.18 | (0.79, 1.74) | 3.92 | ( |
| Community pharmacy | 1.04 | (0.68, 1.58) | 0.85 | (0.64, 1.14) |
| Pharmaceutical industry | 4.95 | ( | 0.04 | ( |
| Product regulation and consumer protection | 1.75 | (0.46, 6.59) | 0.31 | ( |
| Pharmaceutical sales and marketing | 0.73 | (0.38, 1.40) | 0.35 | ( |
| University lecturer | 0.64 | (0.15, 2.72) | 0.44 | ( |
Notes:
Adjusted for gender, GPA, academic program (5-year BPharm or 6-year PharmD), specialty track (pharmaceutical care or industrial pharmacy), type of university (public or private).
Statistically significant at P<0.05. All bold odds ratio’s are statistically significant.
Abbreviation: GPA, grade point average.
Factor analysis for Thai pharmacy core professional competencies
| Domain | Component |
|---|---|
| Professional ethics | |
| Follow basic moral standards | 0.648 |
| Provide on-site services during service hours | 0.793 |
| Concern on patient-centered care | 0.809 |
|
| |
| Systems management | |
| Develop a work project and resource planning | 0.548 |
| Understand about hospital accreditation | 0.758 |
| Participate in improving the hospital’s information technology system | 0.775 |
| Manage on medication system for rational drug use | 0.720 |
| Work with interdisciplinary health care team | 0.630 |
| Communicate with and educate patients and health care team | 0.553 |
| Provide appropriate drug and health information | 0.475 |
|
| |
| Medication selection and procurement | |
| Apply knowledge of pharmaceutical dosage forms on drug selection and clinical practice | 0.577 |
| Apply knowledge of medicinal chemistry on drug selection and clinical practice | 0.654 |
| Apply knowledge of pharmaceutical quality control on drug selection and clinical practice | 0.675 |
| Apply knowledge of pharmacopoeias and certificate of analysis in drug selection | 0.666 |
| Manage the medical system for drug storage, packing, and distribution | 0.604 |
| Prepare nonsterile pharmaceutical regimens for single patient use | 0.531 |
|
| |
| Pharmaceutical care services | |
| Perform drug use evaluation and promote rational drug use | 0.723 |
| Manage adverse drug reactions | 0.757 |
| Provide dispensing and counseling at an outpatient unit | 0.782 |
| Provide clinical services at an inpatient unit | 0.741 |
| Screen prescriptions | 0.775 |
| Perform medical reconciliation | 0.735 |
| Advice on herbal and alternative medicines | 0.461 |
|
| |
| Primary health care and consumer protection | |
| Conduct interventions to solve public health problems in rural community | 0.690 |
| Perform home health care services and primary care services | 0.758 |
| Conduct proactive primary health care services | 0.756 |
| Conduct consumer health protection services: pre-marketing control | 0.751 |
| Conduct consumer health protection services: post-marketing control | 0.733 |
|
| |
| Pharmaceutical industry | |
| Develop a research protocol | 0.718 |
| Develop pharmaceutical formulary | 0.786 |
| Understand drug development process | 0.777 |
| Understand good pharmaceutical practice | 0.807 |
| Understand pharmaceutical manufacturing, industry level | 0.828 |
| Understand drug regulation and product registration process | 0.769 |
| Understand drug laws and regulations | 0.643 |
Notes: Extraction method: principal component analysis. Rotation method: varimax with Kaiser normalization.