AI Article Synopsis

  • * A survey was conducted involving 143 schools in the US and 10 in Canada, with 99 schools responding, revealing that well-being initiatives are more common in cocurricular activities and didactic courses, with less focus on experiential learning.
  • * Findings showed that most well-being content fell under intellectual, emotional, and physical aspects, while areas like financial and spiritual well-being were less represented; there is a call for improved training and consistency in assessing these programs.

Article Abstract

To describe the landscape of well-being content inclusion across schools and colleges of pharmacy in the United States and Canada through identification of content implementation, incorporation, and assessment. A cross-sectional survey was distributed to all accredited schools and colleges of pharmacy in the United States (n=143) and Canada (n=10). Survey questions included curricular and cocurricular timing, frequency, assessment strategies, and support for well-being initiatives, using a framework of eight dimensions (pillars) of wellness to categorize content. Descriptive data analyses were applied to 99 completed surveys (65%), 89 (62%) in the United States and 10 (100%) in Canada. Well-being content was most prevalent within the cocurricular realm and incorporated into didactic and elective more than experiential curricula. The most content came from intellectual, emotional, and physical pillars, and the least content came from financial, spiritual, and environmental pillars. Less than 50% of schools and colleges of pharmacy include well-being within their strategic plans or core values. Funding is primarily at the level of the university (59%) or the school or college of pharmacy (59%). Almost half of respondents reported inclusion of some assessment, with a need for more training, expertise, and standardization. Survey results revealed a wide range of implementation and assessment of well-being programs across the United States and Canada. These results provide a reference point for the state of well-being programs that can serve as a call to action and research across the Academy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10159548PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.5688/ajpe8918DOI Listing

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