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Incorporating a medication therapy management course in a pharmacy undergraduate curriculum: description of implementation and outcomes

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Abstract

Background: The objective of the study is to describe the implementation of a medication therapy management course into the PharmD curriculum with an objective standardized clinical examination, and to assess the impact on students’ knowledge, skills, and satisfaction. Methods: A new medication therapy management course was started for undergraduate pharmacy students. It was then altered to incorporate more active learning and skill-assessment measures; one such alteration was the addition of an objective standardized clinical examination to assess medication therapy management skills. A cross-sectional survey was used to assess the students’ perceptions and satisfaction with the medication therapy management course and the evaluation method. Results: Most students agreed that the weekly medication therapy management simulation activities helped them achieve the course learning outcomes (83%). When asked about the objective standardized clinical examination, most of them also agreed that they were well-oriented and prepared (78%). Students reported few drawbacks like lack of time (41%) and having different assessors at objective standardized clinical examination stations (56%). Conclusion: Implementation of medication therapy management course within the undergraduate pharmacy curriculum help shape the students’ clinical skills and introduce them to this emerging field.

Original languageEnglish
Article number3072
JournalPharmacy Practice
Volume22
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Oct 2024

Keywords

  • curriculum design
  • Medication therapy management
  • MTM
  • OSCE

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