Background And Purpose: Several schools of pharmacy across the United States have taken steps to incorporate international medical mission trips into the doctor of pharmacy (PharmD) curriculum. This study aims to describe the impact of advanced pharmacy practice experience (APPE)-level student pharmacists on an interprofessional team during an international medical mission trip to Jamaica.

Educational Activity And Setting: The Jamaica Medical Mission (JMM) trip is an annual event involving healthcare professionals from several disciplines across multiple universities and healthcare systems. At this institution, the JMM trip is included as part of a rural health elective APPE rotation. Students electing to participate in this rotation are provided with the opportunity to serve as active participants on an interprofessional healthcare team in underserved and under-resourced communities throughout Jamaica. The JMM trip that took place during June 2016 included healthcare professionals and students in the fields of medicine, dentistry, optometry, nursing, and pharmacy. A total of five pharmacist preceptors and 10 pharmacy students attended the JMM trip in June 2016. Approximately three to five clinic sites per day were conducted simultaneously on each of the seven clinic days at various locations throughout Jamaica. The interprofessional healthcare teams provided free medical care, including physical exams and access to prescription and non-prescription medications.

Findings: The interprofessional healthcare team saw a total of 1014 patients and dispensed 1879 prescriptions during the seven clinic days. A total of 811 clinical recommendations were made by student pharmacists and/or pharmacy preceptors. Of these recommendations, 561 (69%) were made by student pharmacists without pharmacy preceptor prompting, 103 (13%) were made by the student pharmacist with preceptor prompting, and 147 (18%) were made by pharmacy preceptors. Over 70% of recommendations made by student pharmacists without pharmacy preceptor prompting were accepted by prescribers.

Discussion And Summary: This study sought to describe the impact of APPE-level student pharmacists on an interprofessional team during an international medical mission trip. Our findings demonstrate that APPE-level student pharmacists were capable of making a substantial number of clinical recommendations without preceptor prompting. The number of recommendations made by students without preceptor prompting were consistently greater than the number of recommendations made with preceptor prompting throughout the trip. Future studies should address student competence in achieving learning objectives associated with international, interprofessional APPE rotations.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cptl.2018.04.009DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

student pharmacists
24
preceptor prompting
24
medical mission
20
jmm trip
16
mission trip
12
international medical
12
appe-level student
12
interprofessional healthcare
12
pharmacy
10
student
9

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!