RESEARCH ARTICLE: Final year M.Pharm. student views and performance in objective structured clinical examinations

Authors

  • Jignesh P Patel Kings College London; Kings College Hospital, United Kingdom
  • Vivian Auyeung Kings College London, United Kingdom
  • Lynda Cameron Kings College London; Guy’s and St Thomas’ Foundation NHS Trust, London, United Kingdom
  • Rebecca Chanda Kings College London; Guy’s and St Thomas’ Foundation NHS Trust, London, United Kingdom
  • Nicola Husain Kings College London; Evelina Children’s Hospital, Guy’s and St Thomas’ Foundation NHS Trust, London, United Kingdom
  • Barry Jubraj Kings College London, United Kingdom
  • Khilna Shah Kings College London, United Kingdom; Boots PLC, United Kingdom
  • Rita Shah Kings College London; King’s College Hospital Foundation NHS Trust, London, United Kingdom
  • Niusha Sherikhan Kings College London, United Kingdom
  • Jennifer M Stevenson Kings College London; Guy’s and St Thomas’ Foundation NHS Trust, London, United Kingdom
  • Janique Waghorn Kings College London, United Kingdom
  • Graham Davies Kings College London, United Kingdom

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.46542/pe.2020.201.295302

Keywords:

Objective Structured Clinical Exam, Undergraduate Students, Clinical Skills Assessment, Clinical Pharmacy

Abstract

Introduction: Objective structured clinical examinations (OSCEs) are widely used as a competency-based assessment of clinical skills within M.Pharm. programmes of many United Kingdom (UK) pharmacy schools.

Aim: To evaluate the clinical performance of final year M.Pharm. students and elicit their views and experiences of the OSCE assessment.

Methods: Students were divided into 11 groups and completed an OSCE exam, comprising 11 stations of seven minutes in length, following a four-day placement in clinical practice. Students were asked to complete an acceptability questionnaire, and their OSCE performance was correlated with their final degree classification and their Oriel rank position.

Results: Overall, the OSCE assessment is acceptable from the students’ perspective. Differences were found between the students’ performances at the individual OSCE stations. Students performed best on patient consultation stations and least on clinical-problem solving stations. There was no correlation between students OSCE marks and their Oriel rank position. There was however a strong correlation between the students OSCE mark and their final degree classification (r=0.528, n=119, p=0.000).

Conclusion: Final year pharmacy undergraduates perform poorly in activities which demand an element of clinical problem identification. Further research is required on how clinical problem solving skills can be developed amongst undergraduates and the specific role placements have in achieving this.

Author Biographies

Jignesh P Patel, Kings College London; Kings College Hospital, United Kingdom

Institute of Pharmaceutical Science, Kings College London & Depart. of Haematological Medicine, Kings College Hospital

Vivian Auyeung, Kings College London, United Kingdom

Institute of Pharmaceutical Science

Lynda Cameron, Kings College London; Guy’s and St Thomas’ Foundation NHS Trust, London, United Kingdom

Institute of Pharmaceutical Science, Kings College London & Depart. of Pharmacy, Guy’s and St Thomas’ Foundation NHS Trust

Rebecca Chanda, Kings College London; Guy’s and St Thomas’ Foundation NHS Trust, London, United Kingdom

Institute of Pharmaceutical Science, Kings College London & Depart. of Pharmacy, Guy’s and St Thomas’ Foundation NHS Trust

Nicola Husain, Kings College London; Evelina Children’s Hospital, Guy’s and St Thomas’ Foundation NHS Trust, London, United Kingdom

Institute of Pharmaceutical Science, Kings College London & Depart. of Pharmacy, Evelina Children’s Hospital

Barry Jubraj, Kings College London, United Kingdom

Institute of Pharmaceutical Science

Khilna Shah, Kings College London, United Kingdom; Boots PLC, United Kingdom

Institute of Pharmaceutical Science, Kings College London

Rita Shah, Kings College London; King’s College Hospital Foundation NHS Trust, London, United Kingdom

Institute of Pharmaceutical Science, Kings College London & Department of Pharmacy, King’s College Hospital Foundation NHS Trust

Niusha Sherikhan, Kings College London, United Kingdom

Institute of Pharmaceutical Science

Jennifer M Stevenson, Kings College London; Guy’s and St Thomas’ Foundation NHS Trust, London, United Kingdom

Institute of Pharmaceutical Science, Kings College London & Depart. of Pharmacy, Guy’s and St Thomas’ Foundation NHS Trust

Janique Waghorn, Kings College London, United Kingdom

Institute of Pharmaceutical Science

Graham Davies, Kings College London, United Kingdom

Institute of Pharmaceutical Science

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Published

14-10-2020

How to Cite

Patel, J. P., Auyeung, V., Cameron, L., Chanda, R., Husain, N., Jubraj, B., Shah, K., Shah, R., Sherikhan, N., Stevenson, J. M., Waghorn, J., & Davies, G. (2020). RESEARCH ARTICLE: Final year M.Pharm. student views and performance in objective structured clinical examinations. Pharmacy Education, 20(1), p 295 – 302. https://doi.org/10.46542/pe.2020.201.295302

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Research Article