Clinical Pharmacology and Medication Safety: A Remote Learning Elective Designed for Senior Medical Students

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Název: Clinical Pharmacology and Medication Safety: A Remote Learning Elective Designed for Senior Medical Students
Autoři: Graham, Elizabeth B., Wightkin, William T., Bay, Curt R., Ikonne, Uzoma S.
Zdroj: Department of Biomedical and Translational Sciences Faculty Publications
Informace o vydavateli: ODU Digital Commons
Rok vydání: 2025
Sbírka: Old Dominion University: ODU Digital Commons
Témata: Clinical pharmacology, Curriculum, Education, Distance/methods, medical, Undergraduate/methods, Female, Humans, Male, Medical education, Medication errors/prevention & control, Medical students, Pharmacology, Clinical/education, Students, Surveys and questionnaires, Curriculum and Instruction, Medical Pharmacology, Online and Distance Education
Popis: In the United States, medical educators have expressed concern that an integrated and condensed pre-clerkship curriculum risks leaving gaps in student pharmacology knowledge. This study evaluates a remote-learning clinical pharmacology elective that integrates fundamental pharmacology concepts and principles of medication safety and explores how the course impacts senior medical students' self-reported readiness for residency. Clinical Pharmacology and Medication Safety is a remote elective course for senior medical students. The course integrates a review of basic pharmacology with clinical pharmacology topics through case-based learning sessions led by clinical pharmacists and physicians. To evaluate the elective's effectiveness, students in the fall and spring cohorts completed pre-elective and post-elective questionnaires, and differences in responses were analyzed using the Mann–Whitney U test. Thematic analysis was used to evaluate qualitative data. Preparation for residency was a major theme that emerged from students responding to why they enrolled in the elective. A significant increase in students' perceived understanding was observed of what is required to safely prescribe drugs and more commonly prescribed drugs such as antimicrobials (p < 0.001). Further, pre- and post-elective analysis revealed a significant increase in students' perceived ability to recognize medication errors and initiate discussions with the health care team (p < 0.001). Eta-squared was calculated to determine effect size, and most indicated a “large difference” from pre-to post. This clinical pharmacology elective exemplifies how to effectively use technology within the elective phase to vertically integrate basic science content across the medical curriculum within the framework of an integrated and condensed pre-clerkship phase.
Druh dokumentu: text
Popis souboru: application/pdf
Jazyk: unknown
Relation: https://digitalcommons.odu.edu/biomedical_pubs/12; https://digitalcommons.odu.edu/context/biomedical_pubs/article/1011/viewcontent/Ikonne_2025_ClinicalPharmacologyandMedicationSafetyARemoteLearningOCR.pdf
DOI: 10.1002/prp2.70150
Dostupnost: https://digitalcommons.odu.edu/biomedical_pubs/12
https://doi.org/10.1002/prp2.70150
https://digitalcommons.odu.edu/context/biomedical_pubs/article/1011/viewcontent/Ikonne_2025_ClinicalPharmacologyandMedicationSafetyARemoteLearningOCR.pdf
Rights: © 2025 The Authors. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 Interntational (CC BY-NC 4.0) License , which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes.
Přístupové číslo: edsbas.355DB04E
Databáze: BASE
Popis
Abstrakt:In the United States, medical educators have expressed concern that an integrated and condensed pre-clerkship curriculum risks leaving gaps in student pharmacology knowledge. This study evaluates a remote-learning clinical pharmacology elective that integrates fundamental pharmacology concepts and principles of medication safety and explores how the course impacts senior medical students' self-reported readiness for residency. Clinical Pharmacology and Medication Safety is a remote elective course for senior medical students. The course integrates a review of basic pharmacology with clinical pharmacology topics through case-based learning sessions led by clinical pharmacists and physicians. To evaluate the elective's effectiveness, students in the fall and spring cohorts completed pre-elective and post-elective questionnaires, and differences in responses were analyzed using the Mann–Whitney U test. Thematic analysis was used to evaluate qualitative data. Preparation for residency was a major theme that emerged from students responding to why they enrolled in the elective. A significant increase in students' perceived understanding was observed of what is required to safely prescribe drugs and more commonly prescribed drugs such as antimicrobials (p < 0.001). Further, pre- and post-elective analysis revealed a significant increase in students' perceived ability to recognize medication errors and initiate discussions with the health care team (p < 0.001). Eta-squared was calculated to determine effect size, and most indicated a “large difference” from pre-to post. This clinical pharmacology elective exemplifies how to effectively use technology within the elective phase to vertically integrate basic science content across the medical curriculum within the framework of an integrated and condensed pre-clerkship phase.
DOI:10.1002/prp2.70150