Pharmacist's identity development within multidisciplinary primary health care teams in Ontario; qualitative results from the IMPACT (†) project
Autor: | Lisa Dolovich, Barbara Farrell, Susan Haydt, Carmel M. Martin, Kevin Pottie, Natalie Kennie, Connie Sellors |
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Rok vydání: | 2009 |
Předmět: |
Interprofessional Relations
health care facilities manpower and services media_common.quotation_subject education Pharmacist Pharmaceutical Science Pharmacy Community Pharmacy Services Pharmacists Grounded theory Academic detailing Professional Role Drug Therapy Nursing Multidisciplinary approach Physicians Humans Medicine Narrative health care economics and organizations media_common Ontario Patient Care Team Primary Health Care business.industry Mentors Clinical pharmacy Feeling Family Practice business |
Zdroj: | Research in Social and Administrative Pharmacy. 5:319-326 |
ISSN: | 1551-7411 |
Popis: | Background Multidisciplinary team development generates changes in roles, responsibilities, and identities of individual health care providers. The Integrating Family Medicine and Pharmacy to Advance Primary Care Therapeutics (IMPACT) project introduced pharmacists into family practice teams across Ontario, Canada, to provide medication assessments, drug information, and academic detailing and to develop office system enhancements to improve drug therapy. Objective To analyze pharmacists' narrative accounts during early integration to study identity development within emerging team-based care. Method Qualitative design using 63 pharmacist narrative reports of pharmacists' experiences over a 9-month integration period. Four independent researchers with varied professional backgrounds used immersion and crystallization to identify codes and iterative grounded theory to determine and debate process and content themes relevant to identity development. Results The pharmacists' narratives spoke of the daily experiences of integrating into a family practice setting: feeling valued and contributing concretely to patient care; feeling underutilized; feeling like a nuisance, or feeling as though working too slowly. Pharmacist mentors helped deal with uncertainty and complexity of care. Pharmacists perceived that complementary clinical contributions enhanced their status with physicians and motivated pharmacists to take on new responsibilities. Changes in perspective, clinic-relevant skill development, and a new sense of professionalism signaled an emerging pharmacist family practice identity. Conclusion Pharmacists found that the integration into team-based primary health care provided both challenges and fresh opportunities. Pharmacists' professional identities evolved in relation to valued role models, emerging practice-level opportunities, and their patient-related contributions. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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