A Pharmacy Drug Knowledge Assessment Pilot: Who Will Fly Farthest and What Downs the Plane?

Pharmacy (Basel). 2023 May 13;11(3):85. doi: 10.3390/pharmacy11030085.

Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the effectiveness of a sequenced drug knowledge pilot in third professional year students in a capstone course.

Methods: A three-phase drug knowledge pilot was conducted in spring 2022. Students completed a total of thirteen assessments, including nine low-stakes quizzes, three formative tests, and a final summative comprehensive exam. Results from the previous year's cohort (historical control) who only completed a summative comprehensive exam were compared to the pilot (test group) results to assess effectiveness. The faculty spent over 300 h developing content for the test group.

Results: The pilot group had a mean score of 80.9% on the final competency exam, which was one percent lower than the control group who had a less rigorous intervention. A sub-analysis was conducted that removed the students who failed (<73%) the final competency exam, and no significant difference in the exam score was found. One practice drug exam was found to be moderately correlated and significant (r = 0.62) with the final knowledge exam performance in the control. The number of attempts on the low-stakes assessments had a low correlation with the final exam score in the test group compared to the control (r = 0.24).

Conclusion: The results of this study suggest a need to further investigate the best practices for knowledge-based drug characteristic assessments.

Keywords: assessment; drug characteristics; education; medications; pharmacy.

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.