Impact of a Digital Tool on Pharmacy Students’ Ability to Perform Medication Reviews: A Randomized Controlled Trial
<p>Study procedure and time-schedule. OSCE = objective structured clinical examination.</p> "> Figure 2
<p>Overall performance in the first and second OSCE measured by an analytic checklist. Horizontal line = median; (*) = outlier.</p> "> Figure 3
<p>Performance development for the control and the intervention groups between the first and the second OSCE. Performance development was generated by subtracting participants’ performance on the second OSCE with their performance on the first OSCE. Horizontal line = median.</p> "> Figure 4
<p>Performance of the first and second OSCE in the subcategory “Assessment”. Horizontal line = median; (*) = outlier.</p> "> Figure 5
<p>Performance of the first and second OSCE in the subcategory “Plan”. Horizontal line = median; (*) = outlier.</p> "> Figure 6
<p>Display of the results of the questionnaire in a forest plot. The box represents the arithmetic mean. The horizontal lines to the left and right of the box indicate the 95% confidence interval. Consensus on a statement is reached when the confidence interval does not intersect the vertical line on 3 of the X-axis of the forest plot. While consensus was reached on all statements for the intervention group, no consensus was reached on statements 2, 3, 5, and 6 for the control group.</p> "> Figure A1
<p>Subjective and objective patient data—Patient 1 in the first OSCE.</p> "> Figure A2
<p>Medication schedule—Patient 1 in the first OSCE.</p> "> Figure A3
<p>Subjective and objective patient data—Patient 2 in the first OSCE.</p> "> Figure A4
<p>Medication schedule—Patient 2 in the first OSCE.</p> "> Figure A5
<p>Subjective and objective patient data—Patient 3 in the first OSCE.</p> "> Figure A6
<p>Medication schedule—Patient 3 in the first OSCE.</p> "> Figure A7
<p>Subjective and objective patient data—Patient 4 in the first OSCE.</p> "> Figure A8
<p>Medication schedule—Patient 4 in the first OSCE.</p> "> Figure A9
<p>Subjective and objective patient data—Patient 5 in the second OSCE.</p> "> Figure A10
<p>Medication schedule—Patient 5 in the second OSCE.</p> "> Figure A11
<p>Subjective and objective patient data—Patient 6 in the second OSCE.</p> "> Figure A12
<p>Medication schedule—Patient 6 in the second OSCE.</p> "> Figure A13
<p>Subjective and objective patient data—Patient 7 in the second OSCE.</p> "> Figure A14
<p>Medication schedule—Patient 7 in the second OSCE.</p> "> Figure A15
<p>Subjective and objective patient data—Patient 8 in the second OSCE.</p> "> Figure A16
<p>Medication schedule—Patient 8 in the second OSCE.</p> "> Figure A17
<p>Corresponding OSCE checklist for Patient 1 in the first OSCE.</p> "> Figure A17 Cont.
<p>Corresponding OSCE checklist for Patient 1 in the first OSCE.</p> "> Figure A18
<p>Corresponding OSCE checklist for Patient 2 in the first OSCE.</p> "> Figure A18 Cont.
<p>Corresponding OSCE checklist for Patient 2 in the first OSCE.</p> "> Figure A19
<p>Corresponding OSCE checklist for Patient 3 in the first OSCE.</p> "> Figure A19 Cont.
<p>Corresponding OSCE checklist for Patient 3 in the first OSCE.</p> "> Figure A20
<p>Corresponding OSCE checklist for Patient 4 in the first OSCE.</p> "> Figure A20 Cont.
<p>Corresponding OSCE checklist for Patient 4 in the first OSCE.</p> "> Figure A21
<p>Corresponding OSCE checklist for Patient 5 in the second OSCE.</p> "> Figure A21 Cont.
<p>Corresponding OSCE checklist for Patient 5 in the second OSCE.</p> "> Figure A22
<p>Corresponding OSCE checklist for Patient 6 in the second OSCE.</p> "> Figure A22 Cont.
<p>Corresponding OSCE checklist for Patient 6 in the second OSCE.</p> "> Figure A23
<p>Corresponding OSCE checklist for Patient 7 in the second OSCE.</p> "> Figure A23 Cont.
<p>Corresponding OSCE checklist for Patient 7 in the second OSCE.</p> "> Figure A24
<p>Corresponding OSCE checklist for Patient 8 in the second OSCE.</p> "> Figure A24 Cont.
<p>Corresponding OSCE checklist for Patient 8 in the second OSCE.</p> ">
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants and Study Design
2.2. Procedure of First and Second OSCE
2.3. Patient Cases
2.4. Software Tool “MediCheck Education”
2.5. “MediCheck Education” Training
2.6. Measurement Instruments
2.6.1. Analytical Checklist for OSCE
2.6.2. Self-Assessment and Satisfaction Questionnaire
2.7. Data Protection, Analysis, and Statistical Methods
3. Results
3.1. Participants Characteristics
3.2. Analytical Checklist—OSCE
3.2.1. The Result of the Overall Performance
3.2.2. Subcategory Analysis
3.3. Self-Assessment and Satisfaction Questionnaire
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
References
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Statement 1 | “I feel generally competent to perform a medication review” |
Statement 2 | “I feel more confident conducting the medication review today than I did during the medication review in the first OSCE” |
Statement 3 | “The time provided for the medication review was sufficient for me” |
Statement 4 | “The documentation provided for the medication review was sufficient for me (subjective and objective patient data, medication schedule, PC for research purposes, medication review tool if used)” |
Statement 5 | “I feel generally competent to have a face-to-face meeting with a physician” |
Statement 6 | “I feel more confident in today’s face-to-face meeting than I did in the face-to-face meeting in the last OSCE” |
Statement 7 | “The use of digital tools such as “MediCheck Education” is a useful addition for a medication review” |
Statement 8 | “The use of digital tools such as “MediCheck Education” is a useful addition to teaching in clinical pharmacy” |
Intervention Group (n = 21) n (%) | Control Group (n = 20) n (%) | |
---|---|---|
Age range | ||
23 years or younger | 13 (62) | 10 (50) |
24–30 years old | 5 (24) | 7 (35) |
30 years or older | 3 (14) | 3 (15) |
Gender | ||
Female | 16 (76) | 14 (70) |
Male | 5 (24) | 6 (30) |
Previous professional experience (community pharmacy) | ||
Yes | 5 (24) | 5 (25) |
No | 16 (76) | 15 (75) |
Intervention Group (n = 21) Score in % | Control Group (n = 20) Score in % | |
---|---|---|
First OSCE | ||
Mean (SD) | 45.0 (18.1) | 43.4 (15.8) |
Median (MAD) | 40.7 (16.5) | 41.1 (17.7) |
Second OSCE | ||
Mean (SD) | 52.1 (13.4) | 35.1 (19.7) |
Median (MAD) | 52.2 (12.1) | 35.3 (21.9) |
Intervention Group (n = 21) Mean (SD) Score in % | Control Group (n = 20) Mean (SD) Score in % | |
---|---|---|
Communication Skills | ||
First OSCE | 52.4 (22.2) | 57.5 (28.2) |
Second OSCE | 57.1 (25.2) | 47.5 (29.1) |
Patient data | ||
First OSCE | 50.0 (22.3) | 52.5 (21.3) |
Second OSCE | 47.6 (20.8) | 38.8 (26.3) |
Assessment | ||
First OSCE | 45.2 (19.5) | 41.9 (21.7) |
Second OSCE | 58.4 (18.0) | 36.3 (22.8) |
Plan | ||
First OSCE | 33.2 (26.3) | 27.1 (22.9) |
Second OSCE | 40.6 (20.0) | 20.9 (22.5) |
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Dabidian, A.; Obarcanin, E.; Ali Sherazi, B.; Schlottau, S.; Schwender, H.; Laeer, S. Impact of a Digital Tool on Pharmacy Students’ Ability to Perform Medication Reviews: A Randomized Controlled Trial. Healthcare 2023, 11, 1968. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11131968
Dabidian A, Obarcanin E, Ali Sherazi B, Schlottau S, Schwender H, Laeer S. Impact of a Digital Tool on Pharmacy Students’ Ability to Perform Medication Reviews: A Randomized Controlled Trial. Healthcare. 2023; 11(13):1968. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11131968
Chicago/Turabian StyleDabidian, Armin, Emina Obarcanin, Bushra Ali Sherazi, Sabina Schlottau, Holger Schwender, and Stephanie Laeer. 2023. "Impact of a Digital Tool on Pharmacy Students’ Ability to Perform Medication Reviews: A Randomized Controlled Trial" Healthcare 11, no. 13: 1968. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11131968