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Using modified information delivery to enhance the traditional pharmacy OSCE program at TMU – a pilot study.

Authors :
Lin, Che-Wei
Chang, Elizabeth H.
Clinciu, Daniel L.
Peng, Yun-Ting
Huang, Wen-Chen
Wu, Chien-Chih
Wu, Jen-Chieh
Li, Yu-Chuan
Source :
Computer Methods & Programs in Biomedicine. May2018, Vol. 158, p147-152. 6p.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Background and Objective Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE) has been used in many areas of healthcare training over the years. However, it constantly needs to be upgraded and enhanced due to technological and teaching changes. We aim at implementing an integrative OSCE method which employs informatics via the virtual patient within the pharmacy education curriculum at Taipei Medical University to enhance the pharmacy students’ competence for using and disseminating information and to also improve critical thinking and clinical reasoning. Methods We propose an integrated pharmacy OSCE which uses standardized patients and virtual patients (DxR Clinician). To evaluate this method, we designed four simulated stations and pilot tested with 19 students in the first year of the Master in Clinical Pharmacy program. Three stations were simulated as the inpatient pharmacy: 1) History and lab data collection; 2) Prescription review; 3) Calling physician to discuss potential prescription problems. The fourth was simulated as the patient ward station to provide patient education. A satisfaction questionnaire was administered at the end of the study. Results Students rated their ability of 2.84, 2.37, 2.37, and 3.63 of 5 for each of the four stations, with the second and third being the most difficult stations. The method obtained an average rating of 4.32 of 5 for relevance, 4.16 for improving clinical ability, 4.32 for practicality in future healthcare work, and 4.28 for willing to have another similar learning experience. Conclusion The integration of Virtual Patient in this study reveals that this assessment method is efficient and practical in many aspects. Most importantly, it provides the test taker with a much closer real-life clinical encounter. Although it is in many ways more difficult, it also provides for better “learning from mistakes” opportunities for test-takers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01692607
Volume :
158
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Computer Methods & Programs in Biomedicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
128432618
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cmpb.2017.11.006