| Literature DB >> 34007720 |
Daniel J Hansen1, Hemachand Tummala1, Wendy Jensen-Bender1, Brittney A Meyer2, Surachat Ngorsuraches2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Evaluating Student Performance and Perception of a Workshop Integrating Pharmacy Practice and a Pharmaceutics Lab. INNOVATION: Common methods for curricular integration are often time and faculty-intensive. An innovative approach to integration was developed and utilized in an introductory compounding workshop. Faculty members collaborated with a compounding pharmacist to design and facilitate a pharmaceutics workshop for first-year pharmacy students. The workshop was composed of four major sections, an introduction to pharmaceutical compounding and the regulations surrounding manufacturing and sterility, a case discussion involving a pediatric patient and the need to develop an appropriate drug delivery system, a short review of pharmaceutical calculations and labeling requirements, and then an introduction to logistics and active learning in a lab setting. CRITICAL ANALYSIS: After taking part in the workshop, students indicated a significantly higher comfort level going into the pharmaceutics lab (3.48±0.83 to 4.04±0.70) and in the compounding process (3.06±0.83 to 3.71±0.80). Their views of the clinical application of the lab and the need to use knowledge gained from other courses in the lab were also significantly improved (4.36±0.68 to 4.61±0.49 and 3.71±0.77 to 4.26±0.74, respectively). In addition, their perceptions of how they will utilize the skills developed as a practicing pharmacist, and their feelings towards the safety procedures involved in compounding, were also positively affected (3.96±0.87 to 4.45±0.59 and 3.28±0.92 to 3.91±0.72, respectively). Finally, students' average quiz score in Spring 2016, when the workshop was instituted, significantly increased from Spring 2015 (90.154±4.98 versus 85.89±10.87, respectively). © University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing.Entities:
Keywords: compounding; curricular integration; pharmaceutics; pharmacy curriculum; pharmacy lab
Year: 2018 PMID: 34007720 PMCID: PMC6302763 DOI: 10.24926/iip.v9i3.1387
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Innov Pharm ISSN: 2155-0417