Professionalism ethics in pharmacy education: Do students have acceptable knowledge or it is a white paper in pharmacy education curriculum?
Authors
Abstract:
Dear Editor, In pharmacy, professionalism must containthe skills necessary to be a capable pharmacypractitioner. It seems that pharmacy studentsdo not become professionals after graduationfrom the pharmacy school. To be a professionalpharmacist, students should have a lifelongcommitment to the society and patients.Evolving professional knowledge, attitudesand behaviors is a critical step in providinghigh quality patient care (1). In the last previousyears, pharmacy practice has changed from drugprescription to patient-centered communicationand more stress on pharmacists’ accountabilityfor the best treatment outcomes. Thus,pharmacists are accountable for providing goodhealth care facilities. In this regard, pharmacistsshould cooperate well with other health careprofessionals and patients (2).An important component of professionalismin pharmacy is ethics education (3). The necessityof ethics education in pharmacy highlightsthe significance of ethical considerationsby pharmacists (2). The significant servicedelivered by pharmacists in Iran is respondingthe patients’ questions. Therefore, pharmacistsmust be up to date with ethical issues and applythe best ethical responses to different patients’problems (2). In Shiraz University of MedicalSciences, the medical ethics department isresponsible for ethics education for all medicaland paramedical students including pharmacystudents. This education consists of one weekworkshop including important issues in pharmacyethics. This is a part of core pharmacy educationcurriculum and all of the students shouldparticipate in this course.In order to measure the students’ knowledgeabout ethics in pharmacy education, weconducted a survey with an 18 item valid andreliable questionnaire containing three majordomains: truthfulness, professional commitment,respect for patients’ rights and confidentiality ofpatients’ information). 162 pharmacy studentsin 7 to 12 semesters in Shiraz pharmacy schoolwere selected through simple random samplingmethod. All of the students filled out thequestionnaire based on a 5 point Likert scale.The results showed that 14 (8.6%) students hada moderate level of knowledge, 68 (42%) had agood level of knowledge, and 80 (49.4%) hada very good level of knowledge. There was nosignificant relationship between gender andlevel of knowledge. There was a significantrelationship between the level of knowledge andeducational semester. Senior students had higherknowledge. The best results were in the domainof respect for patients’ right and confidentiality ofpatients’ information. These results showed thatstudents had an acceptable level of knowledge,especially in the field that is necessary for theirfuture profession (patients’ right and patients’confidentiality). Pharmacy students shouldestablish good relationships with each other,patients, and other health care professionals.Therefore, a professional behavior should beencouraged more than focusing on knowledge. Inthis study, it was not possible to follow the studentsin future years to measure their professionalbehavior, but it is recommended for futurestudies. However, it seems that this knowledgewill not necessarily change to improvement inpractice in pharmacist because pharmacy is not ascience of pure knowledge. The closer integrationof knowledge and practice named “practice-basedknowledge” is an important area that is essentialto be considered by pharmacists (4).Pharmacy students must remain up to datewith changes in their profession, which maycontain new practice guidelines, new pharmacyand therapeutic products, and new technologies.In order to improve the students’ professionalbehavior, they should participate in communityservices, volunteering programs, (serving andhelping others), health education services andlocal health care organizations. After graduation,participation in Continuing ProfessionalDevelopment instead of Continuing PharmacyEducation is necessary to maintain the knowledgeand behavior in this field. In ContinuingProfessional Development, learning occursin lifetime and continues after the classroomin everyday practice (5). Excellence shouldbe considered not only in the undergraduatepharmacy education, but also after graduationtraining, and during practice. Finally, it should bementioned that pharmacy students must remainknowledgeable and pursue guidance to achievethe goal of excellence in professional ethics.
similar resources
Toward a pharmacy curriculum theory: spiral integration for pharmacy education
The explosion of cumulative new molecular entities approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has more than doubled in the last 30 years, from approximately 700 in 1985 to a staggering 1,539 as of December 31st, 2015.1,2 Pharmacists are expected to be the “drug experts” of the healthcare team, providing insight on ideal drug therapies, doses, formulations, side effects, dr...
full textRevision of Iranian pharmacy education, an idea or a necessity?
Human resources development in society or organization is a necessity to secure progress. Without such development societies or organizations fail to achieve their objectives. Human resources development is a three-stage measure to meet the requirements of each society or organization. These three stages are: a) planning and programming: at this stage qualitative and quantitative needs are dete...
full textRevision of Iranian pharmacy education, an idea or a necessity?
Human resources development in society or organization is a necessity to secure progress. Without such development societies or organizations fail to achieve their objectives. Human resources development is a three-stage measure to meet the requirements of each society or organization. These three stages are: a) planning and programming: at this stage qualitative and quantitative needs are dete...
full textA Diabetes Education Program for Pharmacy Students
This paper describes a novel education program for doctor of pharmacy students about diabetes, a chronic disorder of glucose metabolism affecting an estimated 16 million people in the United States. The Diabetes Program (DP) incorporates didactic learning, web-based case evaluation, and role play into a two-week comprehensive module on diabetes care. In the DP, students are placed in the role o...
full textEthics in Pharmacy Curriculum for Undergraduate Pharmacy Students: A Needs Assessment Study.
INTRODUCTION Recent advances in pharmacy practice have created serious ethical challenges for the pharmacists. Pursuing a new philosophy of practice is required to overcome these challenges and optimize the standard of care. In this regard, the current ethics guideline in the Pharmacy curriculum used in Tehran University of Medical Sciences, does not provide a fully comprehensive understanding ...
full textImpact of Pharmacy Training Software, on pharmacy students’ knowledge in Zabol University of Medical Sciences and Their Opinion about it
Introduction: Community pharmacy training course is one of the most important parts of pharmacy training program. As we faced so many problems presenting this course in Zabol pharmacy school, community pharmacy teaching software was designed to decrease the existing problems. Here we evaluated the input of our designed software on knowledge of pharmacy students of Zabol University of Medical Sc...
full textMy Resources
Journal title
volume 6 issue 4
pages 190- 191
publication date 2018-10-02
By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.
Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com
copyright © 2015-2023