Since 2014, select states have allowed pharmacists to prescribe hormonal contraception (HC). This study describes student pharmacists' perceptions of a pharmacist's scope of practice, education, and interest, and identifies differences between students who have completed didactic HC content in their professional curriculum versus those who have not. A voluntary online survey was emailed to all students in three Georgia pharmacy schools. Descriptive statistics were reported. Likert square responses were dichotomized, and Chi square testing identified differences between groups. A total of 1256 students were invited, 35% completed the survey, of those 68% had received HC didactic content in their curriculum. Regardless of HC education, most students "agree" or "strongly agree" that pharmacists are adequately educated to prescribe HC (92% vs. 86%, = 0.05) and prescribing HC is within the pharmacist's scope of practice (89% vs. 84%, = 0.12). Although not currently permitted in Georgia, most are interested in prescribing (97% vs. 96%, = 0.5). Of the students who have received HC didactic content, 87% felt "moderately", "well", or "extremely well-educated" regarding HC prescribing clinical skills. Regardless of didactic training, pharmacy students believe pharmacists are prepared to prescribe HC and support pharmacist-prescribed HC as a part of their future professional scope of practice.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8396284 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy9030145 | DOI Listing |
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