Impacting Student Self-Efficacy and Beliefs of Medication Therapy Management Through a Two-Week Elective

Am J Pharm Educ. 2019 Jun;83(5):6995. doi: 10.5688/ajpe6995.

Abstract

Objective. To develop and introduce an intensive, two-week Foundations of Medication Therapy Management (MTM) elective course into the Doctor of Pharmacy curriculum, and to determine whether the course impacted students' self-confidence in their abilities to perform MTM services and future plans and beliefs about implementing MTM in practice. Methods. The MTM course was an interactive learning environment where students performed actual comprehensive medication reviews within a real-world documentation platform. A 20-item, Likert-scale survey was administered before and after the course to measure students' confidence in learned skills, future plans for using MTM, and beliefs about MTM. Results. Students reported a significant improvement in 10 MTM-specific skill domains. There were significant changes in students' self-confidence in their ability to provide MTM services and in their beliefs about MTM-related services. Students reported overall improvement in self-perceived MTM specific skills. There was no significant change in students' willingness or plans to engage in MTM-related practice in the future. Conclusion. The findings showed that following participation in an MTM elective course, student pharmacists' perceived ability to deliver MTM care increased and their opinions about MTM services improved. Providing a brief MTM elective course that used first-person case studies may empower student pharmacists to confidently perform MTM services in subsequent courses and in their future practice.

Keywords: attitudes or perceptions; pharmacist role; pharmacy education coursework; student pharmacists.

MeSH terms

  • Curriculum
  • Education, Pharmacy / methods*
  • Educational Measurement
  • Humans
  • Medication Therapy Management / education*
  • Self Efficacy
  • Students, Pharmacy / psychology*