| Literature DB >> 32231164 |
Natalie Crown1,2, Beth A Sproule1,3,4, Miles J Luke2, Micheline Piquette-Miller1, Lisa M McCarthy1,2,5,6.
Abstract
A continuing professional development (CPD) program for pharmacists practicing in community and team-based primary care settings was developed and evaluated using Moore's framework for the assessment of continuing medical education. The program had three components: online lectures, a two-day training workshop, and patient case studies. Knowledge (pre-post multiple choice test); attitudes, readiness, and comfort with applying pharmacogenomics in their practices (pre-post surveys); and experiences of implementing pharmacogenomics in practice (semi-structured interviews) were assessed. Twenty-one of 26 enrolled pharmacists successfully completed the program, and were satisfied with their experience. Almost all achieved a score of 80% or higher on the post-training multiple choice test, with significantly improved scores compared to the pre-training test. Pre- and post-training surveys demonstrated that participants felt that their knowledge and competence increased upon completion of the training. In the follow-up, 15 pharmacists incorporated pharmacogenomics testing into care for 117 patients. Ten pharmacists participated in semi-structured interviews, reporting strong performance in the program, but some difficulty implementing new knowledge in their practices. This multi-component CPD program successfully increased pharmacists' knowledge, readiness, and comfort in applying pharmacogenomics to patient care in the short-term, yet some pharmacists struggled to integrate this new service into their practices.Entities:
Keywords: continuing education; continuing professional development; pharmacists; pharmacogenomics; pharmacy
Year: 2020 PMID: 32231164 DOI: 10.3390/pharmacy8020055
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacy (Basel) ISSN: 2226-4787