Implementation of a Vital Signs Skills Programme at a US School of Pharmacy: A Mechanism to Assess Competency for First-Year Student Pharmacists

Authors

  • Sera Chung University of California San Francisco
  • Conan MacDougall University of California San Francisco
  • Tina Brock University of California San Francisco
  • Christie Robinson University of California San Francisco

Keywords:

Curriculum Design, Pharmacy Students, Vital Signs

Abstract

Context: Vital signs skills should be emphasized in US pharmacy curricula. However, there is no standard method for teaching these skills.

Programme: A 3-hour vital signs skills education programme for first professional year students was provided. After the programme, students completed a survey and demonstrated in an assessment manual blood pressure skills on a programmable mannequin arm. Competence in manual blood pressure assessment was evaluated with the mannequin and associations between confidence, experience, and training with performance were determined.

Evaluation: Most students correctly identified the pre-programmed blood pressure on the mannequin within two attempts (102/120, 85%). Most students were confident in their ability to measure blood pressure (98/117, 83.7%). The likelihood of passing trended towards a lower probability of passing among students reporting greater confidence, training, and experience.

Implementation. Develop an observed structured clinical exam as an alternative means to verify student competence in blood pressure assessment after participating in a 3-hour skills programme. 

Author Biographies

Sera Chung, University of California San Francisco

Student Pharmacist, School of Pharmacy

Conan MacDougall, University of California San Francisco

Associate Professor of Clinical Pharmacy, School of Pharmacy

Tina Brock, University of California San Francisco

Professor of Clinical Pharmacy, Associate Dean of Teaching and Learning, School of Pharmacy

Christie Robinson, University of California San Francisco

Health Sciences Assistant Clinical Professor, Department of Clinical Pharmacy, School of Pharmacy

References

ACPE Accreditation Standards and Guidelines for the Professional Program in Pharmacy Leading to the Doctor of Pharmacy Degree. (2006) Chicago, IL: Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (online). Available at: http:// www.acpe-accredit.org/pdfACPERevised PharmDStandards Adopted Jan152006.pdf. Accessed 19 January, 2009.

McCall K.L., Raehl C., Nelson S., Haase K., Fike D.S. (2007) Evaluation of pharmacy students' blood pressure and heart rate measurement skills after completion of a patient assessment course. American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education, 71, 1.

Mort J.R., Hansen D.J. (2010) First-year pharmacy students' self-assessment of communication skills and the impact of video review. American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education, 74, 78.

Nkansah N., Mostovetsky O., Yu C., Chheng T., Beney J., Bond C.M., Bero L. (2010) Effect of outpatient pharmacists' non-dispensing roles on patient outcomes and prescribing patterns. Cochrane Database Syst Rev, 7, CD000336.

Seybert A.L., Barton C.M. (2007) Simulation-based learning to teach blood pressure assessment to doctor of pharmacy students. American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education, 71, 48.

Spray J.W., Parnapy S.A. (2007) Teaching patient assessment skills to doctor of pharmacy students: the TOPAS study. American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education, 71, 64.

Williams J.S., Brown S.M., Conlin P.R. (2009) Videos in clinical medicine. Blood-pressure measurement. The New England Journal of Medicine, 360, e6.

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Published

19-10-2012

How to Cite

Chung, S., MacDougall, C., Brock, T., & Robinson, C. (2012). Implementation of a Vital Signs Skills Programme at a US School of Pharmacy: A Mechanism to Assess Competency for First-Year Student Pharmacists. Pharmacy Education, 12. Retrieved from https://pharmacyeducation.fip.org/pharmacyeducation/article/view/295

Issue

Section

Research Article