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Molding the Contemporary Pharmacist: Tips for Preceptors

This seminar discusses the strategies and techniques for serving as an effective pharmacy preceptor, including understanding the characteristics of millennial learners, incorporating the Pharmacists' Patient Care Process into learning experiences, providing ongoing feedback, and dealing with difficult learners. The session also covers the importance of orientation and ongoing feedback for technician learners.

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Molding the Contemporary Pharmacist: Tips for Preceptors

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  1. Molding the Contemporary Pharmacist: Tips for Preceptors Rayanne Story, Pharm.D., Assistant Dean of Experiential Education, Harding University College of Pharmacy Arkansas Association of Health-System Pharmacists Fall Seminar October 6, 2017

  2. Rayanne Story has nothing to disclose.

  3. Pharmacist Learning Objectives • Identify reasons to serve as a pharmacy preceptor • Outline the characteristics of the millennial learner • Discuss the orientation process for the learner • Describe the steps of the Pharmacists’ Patient Care Process and discuss methods to incorporate it into pharmacy practice learning experiences • Explain the need for providing ongoing feedback to learners in pharmacy practice experiences • Identify strategies for dealing with the difficult learner

  4. Technician Learning Objectives • Understand the importance of an orientation process for the learner. • Discover the need for providing ongoing feedback to learners. • Identify strategies for dealing with a difficult learn

  5. Serving as a Preceptor • Rewarding professional responsibility • Current pharmacy curriculum require experiential education to be over 30% of student learning • IPPE 300 hours minimum concurrent with didactic training • APPE 1440 hours minimum • Student pharmacists serve as pharmacist extenders in patient care • Vital to the growth of the pharmacy profession

  6. Mentoring • Involves ongoing engagement with mentee • Greater investment of time and commitment by both parties • Relationship based on trust and respect • Foster growth

  7. Characteristics of the Millennial Generation • Born between 1981 and 2000 • Nurtured by omnipresent parents • Schedule everything • Feel enormous academic pressure • Prefer digital literacy • Prefer to work in teams; collaborative • Told over and over again that they are special • Crave constant and immediate feedback

  8. Effective Preceptor-Learner Relationships • Structure a positive learning environment • Clearly define expectations, roles and responsibilities • Model behavior • Coach learners • Foster self-reflection

  9. Student Orientation • Goals, objectives and expectations • Syllabus • Training Manuel • Schedule • Tour • Introduction to team members • Evaluation instruments • Competencies provided by schools • Grading rubrics

  10. Delivering Effective Feedback

  11. Competencies • Pressure to provide positive feedback • Duty to ensure one has demonstrated skills necessary • Passing a student that is not competent could put a patient at harm

  12. Vickery AW, Lake FR. Med J Aust 2005; 183(5):267-268

  13. Reprimand *Be specific & focus on the behavior *Wait until you are calm *Do it in a timely manner, don’t delay *Find a private place *Relay your feelings & give the person a second to sense you reaction *Inspire progress Praise *Be specific & timely with your praise *Relay your feelings & give the person a second to sense your reaction Inspire continual similar behavior Successful Constructive Feedback Figure 6-2, Cuellar, L. M., & Ginsburg, D. B. (2016). Preceptor's Handbook for Pharmacists. Bethesda: American Society of Health-System Pharmacists, Inc.. Page 100

  14. The Sandwich Technique for Feedback Positive statements Negative Statement https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRhIFj9aOvyxnR7VWGTjcuLPcBNhsv6Uwjws1AJyZyyvLW42JTt

  15. Methods of Summative Evaluation: • Examination • Written • Oral • Practical • Evaluation Instruments • Mid-term evaluation • Final evaluation

  16. Preceptor Tips: • Learners should be accessed on knowledge as well as communication and professionalism skills • At the midpoint, let learners know how they are progressing and make a plan to correct weaknesses you identify • Feedback should be given throughout the experience so that learners are not surprised by the outcome • Resist the temptation to reward or grade learners based only on improvement; learners need to demonstrate competency • Evaluate the learner objectively, avoiding error and bias

  17. What’s new in Experiential Education at UAMS and Harding University?

  18. CORE Benefits • Intuitive interface • Preceptor availability is gathered electronically on phone, tablet or computer • Evaluations may be completed on a variety of devices • More functionality and easier to use for: • Students • Preceptors • Meets more of the experiential office needs Seth Heldenbrand, UAMS College of Pharmacy 2017

  19. Timeline for CORE Implementation • August 2017 —begin loading preceptor and student information • September-November 2017 –gather preceptor availability electronically • You will have logins, passwords and an instructional email on how to enter your availability for the 2018-2019 year • December 2017 – enter student preferences • January 2018 – optimize the schedule and then release for preceptor approval • May 2018 -- CORE launches as the only preceptor/student experiential software Seth Heldenbrand, UAMS College of Pharmacy 2017

  20. The Pharmacists’ Patient Care Process (PPCP) Joint Commission Pharmacy Practicioners (JCPP)

  21. The Pharmacists’ Patient Care Process https://jcpp.net/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/PatientCareProcess-298x300.jpg

  22. Goals of PPCP: • Promote consistency across the profession • Provide a framework for delivering patient care in any practice setting • Contemporary and comprehensive approach to patient-centered care delivered in collaboration with other members of the health-care team • Applicable to a variety of patient care services delivered by pharmacists, including medication management

  23. Rolling the “wheel” into practice… • Inpatient/Acute Care • Community Pharmacy • Ambulatory Care Clinic

  24. The Difficult Learner

  25. Struggling with professionalism issues: • Contact the Office of Experiential Education or Residency Director • Communicate with the learner about the problem as they may not be aware of it • Require self assessment of the situation • Discuss the problematic behavior • Why is it unacceptable? • Reinforce that it will not be tolerated in the future • Consider progressive discipline depending on the significance • Verbal warning • Written reprimand • Progressing to failure

  26. APPE Competency Form Important Note: Student professionalism is considered a minimum standard of expectation. Therefore, a proficiency score of less than 3 on any of the following six questions will result in a reduced letter grade and trigger an automatic student review by the he Assistant Dean for Experiential Education. Please contact the ADEE for questions or concerns about student professionalism. __Maintains patient/site confidentiality __Recognizes knowledge limitations, asks questions, learns independently, and welcomes formative feedback __Places patients’ welfare above personal self interest __Performs duties in accordance with legal, ethical, social, economic, and professional guidelines __Appropriately uses personal technology (cell phone, tablet, social media, etc)

  27. Struggling with time management issues: • Hold the learner accountable • Provide periodic checkpoints for bigger projects in an effort to break it down into smaller pieces • Set SMART (specific, measureable, attainable, realistic, and timely) goals • Identify tasks that are procrastinated • Discover the best environment and times for personal productivity • Plan a schedule of priorities

  28. Unprepared Learners • Are there barriers to learning? • Ask questions to access clinical knowledge base • Does the learner struggle with time management? • Does the learner lack self-confidence? Introverted?

  29. Entitled Learners • Some learners are accustomed to being rewarded for participation, not production • Concept of student as consumer; blame others for their failures or provide excuses • Expect high grades regardless of performance • Expect all learning to be delivered from the preceptor without significant effort on their part as the learner

  30. Lead the learner from entitlement to empowerment • Be a good role model • Communicate deadlines and guidelines for assignments, do not compromise • Focus on consequences for not meeting expectations instead of discussing rules • Establish an environment where it is safe to fail

  31. Disinterested Learners • Ask learners about previous experiences and what they look to learn on your experience • Connect with your learner over a break or lunch • Demonstrate how the skills they learn will be applicable to future practice • Be passionate about what you teach as learners will sense it http://proper-english-foundatio.yolasite.com/resources/Uninterested%20or%20disinterested.png

  32. Resources for Preceptors

  33. Continuing Education for Preceptors https://www.e-value.net/index.cfm

  34. http://www.gotocei.org/ http://www.gotocei.org/

  35. Helpful books for Preceptors https://store.ashp.org/default.aspx

  36. Final thoughts for Preceptors

  37. http://kevingreenwired.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/question.jpghttp://kevingreenwired.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/question.jpg

  38. ______ assessment monitors the learner in order to provide ongoing feedback. • A. Academic • B. Formative • C. Expressive • D. Summative • E. All of the above

  39. _________ feedback should be given during the middle and end of the experience. • A. Academic • B. Formative • C. Expressive • D. Summative • E. All of the above

  40. What is the name of the new experiential education learning management program adopted by UAMS and Harding? • A. E-Value • B. ExamSoft • C. Learning Space • D. CORE

  41. References • Cuellar, L. M., & Ginsburg, D. B. (2016). Preceptor's Handbook for Pharmacists. Bethesda: American Society of Health-System Pharmacists, Inc. . • Soric, M. M. (2013). Maximize Your Rotations. Bethesda, MD: American Society of Health-System Pharmacists, Inc. • Soric, M. M., Schneider, S. R., & Wisneski, S. S. (2017). The Effective Pharmacy Preceptor. Bethesda, MD: American Society of Health-System Pharmacists, Inc. . • The Pharmacists' Patient Care Process. (2017, June 20). Retrieved from Joint Commission of Pharmacy Practitioners: https://jcpp.net/patient-care-process/ • Zlactic, T. D. (2010). Clinical Faculty Survival Guide. Lenexa, KS: American College of Clinical Pharmacy.

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