Student and pre-registration pharmacist performance in a UK Prescribing Assessment
Autor: | Simon Maxwell, Anne Boyter, Fiona Reid, Gail Craig, Ailsa Power, Scott Cunningham, Derek Stewart, Fiona Stewart |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
RM
medicine.medical_specialty education Pharmacist Pharmaceutical Science Pharmacy Pharmacists Toxicology Drug Prescriptions Professional Role Global policy medicine Humans Pharmacology (medical) Students Competence (human resources) Curriculum Pre-Registration Competency Pharmacology Pharmacy education Descriptive statistics business.industry Usability Scotland Prescribing skills Pharmaceutical Services Family medicine business |
Zdroj: | International Journal of Clinical Pharmacy. 44:100-109 |
ISSN: | 2210-7711 2210-7703 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11096-021-01317-z |
Popis: | Student and pre-registration pharmacist performance in a UK Prescribing Assessment’: room for improvement and need for curricular change Background Increasingly the global policy direction is for patient-facing pharmacist prescribers. The ‘UK Prescribing Safety Assessment’ (PSA) was developed for medical graduates to demonstrate prescribing competencies in relation to the safe and effective use of medicines. Objectives To determine PSA performance of final year undergraduate student pharmacists (year 4) and pre-registration pharmacy graduates (year 5) and explore their opinions on its suitability. Setting Scotland, UK Methods Final year undergraduates (n = 238) and pre-registration pharmacists (n = 167) were briefed and undertook the PSA. PSA questions were mapped to specific thematic areas with 30 questions over 60 min. Data was analysed using descriptive statistics. A questionnaire was completed to gauge opinions on appropriateness of the PSA. Main Outcome Measure PSA scores Results Mean total PSA score for pre-registration pharmacists (64.4, SD 10) was significantly higher than for undergraduates (51.2, SD 12.0,) (p < 0.001). Pre-registration pharmacists performed significantly better across all question areas (all p < 0.001 other than ‘adverse drug reactions’, p < 0.01). Hospital pre-registration pharmacists performed statistically significantly better than community with higher overall scores (67.4, SD 9.8 v 63.2, SD 9.8, p < 0.05). Positive views on the appropriateness of the approach and the usability of the online interface were obtained from participants. Conclusion Hospital pre-registration pharmacists performed better than the undergraduates, but there is a need to improve prescribing skills in all, most notably in diagnostic skills. The PSA is acceptable to the participants. These results will help inform pharmacy curricula development and provides a cross-disciplinary method of assessment of prescribing competence. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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