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Development of a project for interprofessional collaboration between medical and pharmacy students to improve medication safety in polypharmacy (PILLE)

AIM: Interprofessional collaboration is particularly relevant to patient safety in outpatient care with polypharmacy. The educational project “PILLE” is meant to give medical and pharmacy students an understanding of the roles and competencies needed for cooperation in the provision of healthcare an...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Gehrke-Beck, Sabine, Petersen, Maike, Herrmann, Wolfram J., Zimmermann, Nicole, Daub, Eva, Seeger, Johanna, Schulz, Josefine, Czimmeck, Constanze, Lauterbach, Noemi, Peters, Harm, Kloft, Charlotte, Schulz, Martin, Siebenbrodt, Ingo, Behrend, Ronja
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: German Medical Science GMS Publishing House 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10010767/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36923317
http://dx.doi.org/10.3205/zma001585
Descripción
Sumario:AIM: Interprofessional collaboration is particularly relevant to patient safety in outpatient care with polypharmacy. The educational project “PILLE” is meant to give medical and pharmacy students an understanding of the roles and competencies needed for cooperation in the provision of healthcare and to enable interprofessional learning. METHOD: The curriculum is aimed at pharmacy and medical students and was developed in six steps according to the Kern cycle. It is comprised of an interprofessional seminar, a joint practical training in a simulated pharmacy, and a tandem job shadowing at a primary care practice. The project was implemented in three stages due to the pandemic: The interprofessional online seminar based on the ICAP model and the digital inverted classroom was held in the 2020 winter semester; the interprofessional practical training was added in the 2021 summer semester; and the interprofessional tandem job shadowing at a primary care practice in the 2021 winter semester. Attitudes toward interprofessional learning, among other things, was measured in the evaluation using the SPICE-2D questionnaire (Student Perceptions of Physician-Pharmacist Interprofessional Clinical Education). RESULTS: In the first three semesters, a total of 105 students (46 pharmacy, 59 medicine) participated in the project, of which 78 participated in the evaluation (74% response rate). The students stated, in particular, that they had learned about the competencies and roles of the other profession and desired additional and more specific preparatory materials for the course sessions. The SPICE-2D questionnaire showed high values for both groups of students already in the pre-survey and these increased further as a result of the project. CONCLUSION: Joint case-based learning could be implemented under the conditions imposed by the pandemic. Online teaching is a low-threshold means to enable interprofessional exchange.