Pharmacy students' process of learning of real patients in a simple first-person perspective patient simulation exercise: A qualitative analysis

Susanne Kaae*, Armin Andersen*, Bente Gammelgaard*, Frederik Voetmann Christiansen*, Caroline Buhl*

*Corresponding author for this work

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Abstract

Introduction: Pharmacists need more insight into patients' perspectives on medicine to target their counseling and improve patient outcomes. Patient simulation exercises, where pharmacy students are asked to consume medicine-like products, have been shown to foster such understandings, although the specifics of how this occurs, in particularly, how students turn their first-person perspectives toward generalizations about real patients' lives with medicines, are not well documented. The aim was to identify central aspects of the learning process by introducing reflection questions about real patients and follow students' development during a study period. Methods: The study was conducted with students in their 4th semester in the second year of Pharmacy Education at the University of Copenhagen who were asked to respond to free text questions in a survey instrument about their daily experiences of taking a licorice product for one week as well as answering patient reflection questions. Qualitative deductive analysis was performed by coding students' experiences according to concepts of ‘experiential learning’. Pattern identification within each concept was then inferred, as were their interrelationships. Results: Patient reflection questions enabled students to turn their first-person perspectives toward relevant generalizations about real patients' lives with medicines, including involved psychological mechanisms and how real patient groups differ in their ability to take medicine regularly. Students who during the week faced challenges with following the required dosing scheme came to more nuanced realizations that medicine adherence requires special efforts and restricts one's daily life; hence, negative emotions were involved in the learning process. Conclusions: The design of the simple patient simulation exercise gave rise to new types of insights into real patients' lives with medicines. Negative emotions due to interference between the requirements of the exercise and students' normal social lives, as well as commitment to the exercise, were important aspects of this process.

Original languageEnglish
Article number102153
JournalCurrents in Pharmacy Teaching and Learning
Volume16
Issue number10
Number of pages12
ISSN1877-1297
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

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Keywords

  • Medication adherence
  • Patient simulation
  • Pharmacy education
  • Qualitative research

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