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1.
J Am Pharm Assoc (2003) ; 63(1): 80-89, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36117106

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The glass ceiling is a metaphor used to describe an invisible barrier that prevents an underrepresented group from rising beyond a certain level. Among pharmacists, underrepresented groups face various barriers and limitations to their successes. OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to apply the intersectionality framework to data collected from the 2019 National Pharmacist Workforce Study (NPWS) to understand the association of gender and race with leadership aspiration among pharmacists, including differences in perceived barriers and attractors for pursuing leadership. METHODS: The 2019 NPWS was conducted using an electronic Qualtrics survey. Three e-mails containing the survey link were sent to a systematic random sample of 94,803 pharmacists through the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy Foundation e-profile system. The 2019 NPWS had an overall response rate of 6% (5705/94,803). A total of 8466 pharmacists clicked on the survey link, resulting in a usable response rate of 67.3% (5705/8466). Data were analyzed in SPSS software using descriptive and Pearson's r and chi-square test statistics. RESULTS: Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) pharmacists reported holding 10.7% of all leadership positions. Leadership positions included manager, assistant manager, executive, dean, director, chief pharmacy officer, owner or partner, and other leadership position types. White men and women reported the lowest interest in leadership (38.8% and 37.7%), whereas Black men (65.1%), Latinas (59.2%), Black women (58.5%), and Latinos (57.1%) had the highest interest in leadership. "The ability to make an impact" was the most frequently selected attractor for wanting to pursue leadership, selected by 92.5% and 79.6% of Black men and women, respectively, 77.8% of Other women, and 76.9% of Latinos. At graduation from pharmacy school, the student debt loan average of all graduation years ranged from $63,886 (± $73,701) for Other men to $112,384 (± $105,417) for Black women. Higher student loan debt was positively correlated with wanting to pursue a leadership position (r = 0.22, P < 0.001). Black women graduating 2011-2019 had the highest student loan debt at graduation ($194,456 ± $88,898). CONCLUSION: Interest in leadership positions by BIPOC pharmacists compared with reported leadership roles were inversely correlated. Understanding the discrepancy in interest in leadership and reported leadership positions held, particularly with relation to race and gender, is essential to understanding equity in pharmacy leadership. Further research is warranted to understand the factors that impede the ascension of women and underrepresented pharmacists into leadership positions.


Assuntos
Assistência Farmacêutica , Farmácia , Masculino , Humanos , Feminino , Equidade de Gênero , Liderança , Enquadramento Interseccional
2.
J Am Pharm Assoc (2003) ; 61(5): e90-e95, 2021.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34158255

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Prior national surveys have quantified unemployment in the pharmacy workforce, and recent surveys have occurred in a changing environment, with increased numbers of pharmacists in the labor market. OBJECTIVES: We sought to investigate the rate of unemployment and situations of unemployed pharmacists. METHODS: Data from the 2019 National Pharmacist Workforce Survey were analyzed, focusing on an initial question about employment status and follow-up questions for unemployed respondents about whether they were seeking a job, the reason they were unemployed, and how long they had been unemployed. RESULTS: Overall, 4.4% of the respondents were unemployed, with higher rates occurring for female pharmacists, older pharmacist cohorts, and respondents of color, with the highest rate occurring (9.3%) for Black pharmacists. Most (74.4%) of the unemployed pharmacists were seeking a job in pharmacy, but 16.6% were not seeking any job. Nearly two-thirds of the unemployed pharmacist respondents had left the workforce involuntarily, with men at higher rates than women. The youngest cohort of unemployed pharmacists was the least likely to be forced to leave and more likely to leave for workplace-related or personal reasons. Black pharmacists had the overall highest rate of leaving the workforce involuntarily. On average, the unemployed pharmacists had been out of work nearly 2 years (19.2 months), and the periods out of work ranged widely. Those seeking a job in pharmacy predominantly (75.7%) had been unemployed for 1 year or less. More than half of the pharmacists involuntarily unemployed had been unemployed for 6 months or less. CONCLUSION: An increased rate of unemployment and a higher proportion of those unemployed seeking work occurred in this most recent national survey of the pharmacist workforce. Differences in the extent of unemployment and whether leaving the workforce was voluntary or involuntary occurred in pharmacists of color and in some age cohorts.


Assuntos
Farmácias , Farmácia , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Farmacêuticos , Inquéritos e Questionários , Desemprego , Recursos Humanos
3.
J Am Pharm Assoc (2003) ; 61(5): 522-532, 2021.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33903059

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Most pharmacists in the United States are women, and the profession is becoming more racially diverse. The recent increase in political and social movements in the United States has heightened our awareness of the importance of better understanding the experiences of underrepresented individuals and groups. Little is known about discrimination and harassment in the profession of pharmacy in the United States. OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to provide evidence that discrimination and harassment exist in the pharmacy profession and explore differences in discrimination and harassment using the intersectionality of race and sex. METHODS: The 2019 National Pharmacist Workforce Survey (NPWS) utilized an electronic survey that was distributed using a 3-contact Dillman approach by email to a randomized sample of 96,110 licensed pharmacists from all 50 U.S. states using the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy Foundation e-profile system. The 2019 NPWS included a new battery of questions to assess the prevalence of discrimination and harassment in pharmacy. RESULTS: The most common bases of discrimination experienced were based on age (31.2%), sex (29%), and race or ethnicity (16.6%). The most common type of harassment experienced was "hearing demeaning comments related to race or ethnicity" at 15.6%. The intersectionality analysis revealed different experiences among sex or race combinations. Black and Asian male pharmacists had the highest rate of "hearing demeaning comments about race or ethnicity." Nonwhite pharmacists were more likely to experience harassment from customers or patients compared with their white colleagues. Black female pharmacists had the highest rate of being "very unsatisfied" with the results of reporting discrimination and harassment to their employer. CONCLUSION: Discrimination, including harassment and sexual harassment, is illegal, immoral, and unjust. As the profession of pharmacy continues to become more diverse, there must be a conscious, systemic, and sustained effort to create and maintain workplaces that are safe, equitable, and free of discrimination.


Assuntos
Farmácias , Farmácia , Assédio Sexual , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Farmacêuticos , Inquéritos e Questionários , Estados Unidos , Recursos Humanos
4.
J Am Pharm Assoc (2003) ; 60(2): 311-318, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31126829

RESUMO

OBJECTIVES: To identify workforce issues likely to affect pharmacists working in retail clinics (RCs) colocated with community pharmacies and to generate recommendations for optimizing health, cost, and operations outcomes. DESIGN AND PARTICIPANTS: A Delphi expert panel process using researchers with pharmacist workforce research experience was used. Panelists responded to 2 surveys of 3 rounds each. In survey 1, panelists used a 4-point linear numeric scale to rate the importance of 15 impact factors on pharmacists working in the RC/pharmacy setting. In survey 2, panelists used a 3-point linear numeric scale to rate the importance of recommendations for optimal outcomes. Recommendations were structured around elements from collaboration theory, a framework for evaluating critical areas for success in merged operations. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Consensus was defined as ≥ 80% rating an impact "very" or "moderately" important (survey 1) and "very" important (survey 2). Impact factors were rank-ordered by ratings and numeric scoring. Selected comments about consensus items were reported. RESULTS: The 8-person panel had 100% response rates for both surveys. 12 of the 15 impact variables achieved consensus (survey 1). The highest ranking impacts were ability to establish collaborative relationships, relationships with coworkers, including nurse practitioners, and location of the RC relative to the pharmacy. Of 15 recommendations (survey 2), 5 achieved consensus and focused heavily on information sharing and early and ongoing collaboration among all stakeholders. CONCLUSION: Clinical, economic, health care quality, and patient preference data suggest that RCs colocated with pharmacies are likely to play a permanent role in U.S. health care. RCs can affect pharmacists and pharmacies positively or negatively. Positive impacts are most likely where establishing collaborative partnerships with all stakeholders, including patients, throughout planning, implementation, and operation are emphasized. With only about 3% of pharmacy operations colocated with RCs now, attention and resources should be devoted to developing and testing models based on collaboration principles.


Assuntos
Serviços Comunitários de Farmácia , Farmácias , Técnica Delphi , Humanos , Farmacêuticos , Recursos Humanos
5.
J Am Pharm Assoc (2003) ; 60(1): 47-56, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31669419

RESUMO

OBJECTIVES: To describe the views of pharmacists and student pharmacists regarding (1) aspects of life and experiences that provide professional and personal satisfaction and fulfillment, (2) causes of stress, and (3) needs related to maintaining satisfaction and fulfillment. DESIGN: A generic qualitative research design was used for collecting data from 380 pharmacists and 332 student pharmacists who wrote responses to an online survey hosted by the American Pharmacists Association (APhA) from November 17 to December 2, 2018, using standard data collection procedures applied by that organization. APhA uses its member and affiliate data files as its sampling frame and limits the number of contacts per year for each person in those files. De-identified responses from those who volunteered to write comments were sent to the research team for analysis. A conventional content analysis approach was applied for analysis of the text. Analysts convened to discuss emergent themes and develop operational descriptions. Key segments of text that best represented each theme were identified. Personal presuppositions were disclosed and were useful for developing group consensus for theme identification and description. Rigor was supported through assessment of credibility, confirmability, intercoder checking, transferability, inductive thematic saturation, and authenticity. SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: Participants are in the design since data already collected. OUTCOME MEASURES: Not applicable. RESULTS: Findings showed that pharmacists and student pharmacists are able to recognize and pursue achievement, recognition, responsibility, advancement, relationship, esteem, self-actualization, meaning, and accomplishment in both their professional and personal lives. However, external factors such as "workism" and individual factors such as "moral distress" were identified as areas of improvement that are needed for well-being and resilience. CONCLUSION: Pharmacists' basic human needs are being met, but to improve well-being and resilience for pharmacists in both their professional and personal lives, there is a need for addressing both the external factors and individual factors that they encounter.


Assuntos
Satisfação Pessoal , Farmacêuticos , Atitude do Pessoal de Saúde , Coleta de Dados , Humanos , Papel Profissional , Pesquisa Qualitativa , Estudantes
6.
J Am Pharm Assoc (2003) ; 57(1): 47-55, 2017.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27838392

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: To examine the association between pharmacists' demographics, practice variables, worklife attitudes (e.g., work environment stress, control in the work environment, professional commitment, work-home conflict, and organizational commitment), and their perceived job alternatives. DESIGN: Cross-sectional descriptive study. SETTING: A representative nationwide sample of licensed pharmacists in the United States, 2014. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 1574 practicing pharmacists. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: A previously validated Likert-type scale was used to measure perceived job alternatives. Pharmacists reported their perception on how easy it would be to find a better job with the use of 17 common organizational characteristics. The higher the score, the easier they perceived it would be to find a new job. RESULTS: The perceived job alternatives scale manifested 4 constructs: environmental conditions, professional opportunities, compensation, and coworkers. Multivariate regression analysis showed that organizational commitment was the most influential worklife attitude and was negatively associated with all constructs except better compensation. The higher professional commitment and environmental stress, the easier pharmacists perceive it would be to find a new job with better environmental conditions, such as better professional treatment by management. Younger pharmacists indicated higher perceived levels of ease in finding a job with better environmental conditions and professional opportunities. Male pharmacists also reported a higher perceived level of ease in finding an alternate job with better professional opportunities. White pharmacists perceived it would be easier to find a new job with better environmental aspects and compensation. No statistical significance was observed in perceived job alternatives among pharmacists practicing in different primary work settings after adjusting for other variables. CONCLUSION: Demographics and worklife attitudes were found to affect perceived availability of job alternatives. Organizational commitment was the most important factor inversely associated with pharmacists' perceptions of better job alternatives. Employers may retain pharmacists by constantly maintaining pharmacists' sense of belonging to their organizations.


Assuntos
Atitude do Pessoal de Saúde , Emprego/psicologia , Farmacêuticos/psicologia , Local de Trabalho/psicologia , Adulto , Fatores Etários , Estudos Transversais , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Análise Multivariada , Percepção , Farmacêuticos/organização & administração , Análise de Regressão , Estresse Psicológico/epidemiologia , Inquéritos e Questionários , Estados Unidos , Local de Trabalho/organização & administração
7.
J Am Pharm Assoc (2003) ; 57(1): 72-76.e1, 2017.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27777075

RESUMO

OBJECTIVES: To describe services provided by community pharmacies and to identify factors associated with services being provided in community pharmacies. DESIGN: Cross-sectional national mail survey. SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: Pharmacists actively practicing in community pharmacies (independent, chain, mass merchandisers, and supermarkets). OUTCOME MEASURES: Frequency and type of pharmacy services available in a community pharmacy, including medication therapy management, immunization, adjusting medication therapy, medication reconciliation, disease state management, health screening or coaching, complex nonsterile compounding, and point-of-care testing. RESULTS: With a 48.4% response rate, the survey showed that community pharmacies offered on average 3 of the 8 services studied. Pharmacy chains and supermarket pharmacies reported providing significantly more services than did mass merchandise pharmacies. The number of pharmacy services provided was positively associated with involvement in an interprofessional care team, innovativeness, and perceived workload. The number of pharmacy services was negatively correlated with having 3.5 or more pharmacy technicians on duty. CONCLUSION: Pharmacy chains and supermarkets are providing the most pharmacy services among community pharmacy settings. The number of services provided was associated with innovativeness, technician staffing, and perceived workload. Also, involvement with an interprofessional care team supported greater service delivery. Community pharmacies vary in their provision of services beyond dispensing.


Assuntos
Serviços Comunitários de Farmácia/organização & administração , Conduta do Tratamento Medicamentoso/organização & administração , Farmacêuticos/organização & administração , Técnicos em Farmácia/estatística & dados numéricos , Estudos Transversais , Pesquisas sobre Atenção à Saúde , Humanos , Equipe de Assistência ao Paciente/organização & administração , Testes Imediatos , Carga de Trabalho
8.
J Am Pharm Assoc (2003) ; 56(4): 433-440.e8, 2016.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27450139

RESUMO

OBJECTIVES: To examine changes from 2009 to 2014 in variables related to whether, how much, and where licensed pharmacists worked as pharmacists. Comparisons were made separately for men and women pharmacists. DESIGN: Data were obtained from 2 cross-sectional, descriptive surveys of licensed pharmacists and represented 1394 pharmacists in 2009 and 2446 pharmacists in 2014. The useable response rates to the surveys were 52.3% and 48.2%, respectively. SETTING: United States. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: We examined the work status, the work setting, work position, and age distribution of actively practicing pharmacists. We studied the proportion of pharmacists working part-time overall and by age group and determined full-time equivalents (FTEs) by age group. RESULTS: From 2009 to 2014, the proportion of licensed pharmacists that reported actively practicing pharmacy decreased for both men and women pharmacists. A significantly larger proportion of men pharmacists reported being retired in 2014 compared with 2009. In 2014, women represented a majority of actively practicing pharmacists and pharmacists in management positions. The proportion of actively practicing women pharmacists that worked part-time decreased from 2009 to 2014, and the FTE contribution of women pharmacists was approximately equal to men pharmacists in 2014. The proportion of pharmacists working in community practice settings decreased from 2009 to 2014. CONCLUSION: The period 2009 to 2014 appears to have been a time of great change in the pharmacist workforce and for work participation by pharmacists, reinforcing the need to continue to monitor changes that affect work participation by pharmacists.


Assuntos
Emprego/estatística & dados numéricos , Farmacêuticos/estatística & dados numéricos , Adulto , Distribuição por Idade , Idoso , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Distribuição por Sexo , Fatores de Tempo , Estados Unidos
9.
Am J Pharm Educ ; 87(12): 100610, 2023 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37865387

RESUMO

Pharmacists and other pharmacy personnel are experiencing job stress and burnout, and in some instances, suicidal ideation and death by suicide. However, the described lived experiences of pharmacists and other pharmacy personnel are not defined by burnout. Thus, consideration of and research about whether pharmacy personnel are possibly experiencing moral distress or moral injury is necessary and urgent. The pharmacy academy is served by considering workplace conditions and lived experiences of pharmacists because of the potential, negative impact on prospective student recruitment, quality of experiential sites and preceptors, sites for clinical faculty placement, and the well-being of alumni. Understanding phenomena occurring for pharmacy personnel and determining how they impact the pharmacy academy can lend itself to the future development of solutions.


Assuntos
Esgotamento Profissional , Educação em Farmácia , Farmácias , Farmácia , Transtornos de Estresse Pós-Traumáticos , Humanos , Princípios Morais
10.
Explor Res Clin Soc Pharm ; 9: 100237, 2023 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36923066

RESUMO

Background: Pharmacy employers want to improve pharmacists' job satisfaction, but ratings of job satisfaction are highly subjective, as evaluating job satisfaction involves weighing simultaneously the importance of multiple correlated determinants that are often perceived unequally. Objectives: To 1) describe the application of relative importance analysis in estimating the predictive ability of correlated determinants of job satisfaction, and to rank the determinants in order of relative importance, and 2) explore how the perceived relative importance of job satisfaction predictors may vary across community pharmacists' age, gender, and work setting categories. Methods: Data were obtained from the 2019 National Pharmacy Workforce Survey administered to 96,110 licensed U.S. pharmacists. Multiple regression analysis (MR) and relative weight analysis (RWA) were used to assess the predictive ability of determinants to explain pharmacists' job satisfaction. Subgroup analyses were performed to explore variations in the perceived relative importance of predictors across pharmacists' age, gender and work setting categories. Results: Over the entire sample of community pharmacists, no personal experience of workplace discrimination [RW = 0.0613, rank = 1] and less reported engagement in advanced dispensing activities [RW = 0.0235, rank = 2] were most associated with greater job satisfaction, as both predictors jointly accounted for 67.5% of the predicted criterion variance (R 2). Pharmacists' compensation was observed to have the lowest perceived relative importance for predicting job satisfaction [RW = 0.0005, rank = 6], accounting for 0.5% of R 2. Between-group comparisons showed that, no personal experience of workplace discrimination had the highest perceived relative importance for job satisfaction across pharmacists' age groups, among women, and across most work settings except small chain pharmacies. Within-group comparisons showed that pharmacists' compensation was significantly more important than professional interactions (ΔRW(PC-PPI) 0.2900 [0.0637, 0.5360]) for job satisfaction among pharmacists in large chain pharmacies, while patient-care services was significantly more important than compensation for job satisfaction in independent (ΔRW(PPS-PC) 0.1761 [0.0017, 0.5980]) and health system retail pharmacists (ΔRW(PPS-PC) 0.4190 [0.0444, 0.8303]). Conclusions: Relative importance analysis corroborated multiple regression and provided a more interpretable presentation of variable influence on community pharmacists job satisfaction as the importance of personal and workplace characteristics in how pharmacists evaluate their job satisfaction varied across age, gender and work setting categories.

11.
Am J Health Syst Pharm ; 80(5): 284-295, 2023 02 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36445844

RESUMO

PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to describe the demographics, training, clinical specialties, and practice activities of ambulatory care pharmacists using data from the 2019 National Pharmacist Workforce Study (NPWS). SUMMARY: The 2019 NPWS was conducted using a 3-contact electronic survey sent to a random sample of 94,803 pharmacists using the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy Foundation e-Profile system. The 2019 NPWS had a response rate of 67.3% (5,705/8,466), based on the number of prospective respondents who clicked the survey link. A subset of pharmacists' responses (n = 4,557) was used for this analysis, which included those who selected an employment status of "practicing as a pharmacist." Of the 4,557 actively practicing pharmacists responding, 338 (8.0%) reported working in the ambulatory care setting. Ambulatory care pharmacists were predominately White (71.6%), women (67.5%), and/or between the ages of 31 and 40 years (36.9%). A total of 41.3% had completed PGY1 residency training, 14% had completed PGY2 residency training, and 29.3% had completed one or more board certifications. Their most common clinical specialty areas were anticoagulation (21.7%), endocrinology (19.7%), hematology/oncology (16.2%), and primary care (16.2%). A total of 49.6% reported using a collaborative practice agreement. CONCLUSION: Ambulatory care pharmacists reported more training and certifications than the overall sample of pharmacists. These pharmacists practiced in a variety of clinical specialty areas and engaged in a range of in-person and telecommunication medication management activities. This study provides a baseline assessment of the ambulatory care pharmacist workforce that can be used to assess changes over time.


Assuntos
Farmacêuticos , Farmácia , Adulto , Feminino , Humanos , Assistência Ambulatorial , Estudos Prospectivos , Recursos Humanos , Assistência Farmacêutica
12.
Innov Pharm ; 14(3)2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38487385

RESUMO

Background: To better address their patients' needs, community pharmacists are expanding from their traditional role of dispensing to managing medications and providing other care. Objective: This study characterized services reported by pharmacists practicing in community pharmacy settings in the 2019 National Pharmacist Workforce Study (NPWS). Methods: The 2019 NPWS was conducted via an online survey. E-mails containing survey links were sent to a systematic random sample of 96,110 U.S. pharmacists. The survey allowed tailoring of questions related to specific practice settings and for respondents in community pharmacies included reporting on delivery of twelve services. Other descriptive characteristic questions included community pharmacy type, staffing, monitoring activities, self-reported workload, and respondent demographics. An index was created by summing the number of yes responses for the service questions. This index served as the dependent variable in an ordinary least squares regression examining the association of work setting characteristics with the index. Results: Usable responses were received from 2,150 community pharmacists. The top four services were: administer vaccines (91.1%), patient medication assistance program (83.7%), naloxone dispensing (72.8%) and medication synchronization (67.2%). The regression model was significant, with supermarket pharmacies having a higher service index than large chains. Elevated service index scores were associated with more technicians on duty, CPESN participation, direct communication with primary care providers, practicing under a CPA and monitoring activities. Conclusions: Pharmacy operational characteristics were important influences on the delivery of services in community pharmacies. These findings can help inform the continuing transformation of community pharmacy practice.

13.
J Am Pharm Assoc (2003) ; 52(3): 333-41, 2012.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22618973

RESUMO

OBJECTIVES: To identify unmet needs of patients taking medications for chronic health conditions and identify medication-related services that patients with chronic health conditions would desire. DESIGN: Descriptive, exploratory, nonexperimental study. SETTING: Large midwestern state in spring 2010. PARTICIPANTS: 465 patients 45 years or older taking one or more prescriptions for chronic health problems. INTERVENTION: Cross-sectional survey. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Patient-reported usefulness of, satisfaction with, and intention to use medication-related services. RESULTS: Respondents wanted to be highly involved in treatment decisions but found medication information they received to be moderately useful and satisfactory. Medication-related services fell into three groups based on reported intention to use: therapy advice, cost advice, and medication organization. Desire to be involved in treatment decisions was a key factor in predicting reported intention to use therapy advice and cost advice services. The perceived affordability of medications was another important factor in patients' intention to use cost advice and medication organization services. Age, chronic conditions, number of prescription drugs, and the cost of therapy were not important in predicting the intention to use medication-related services in this population. CONCLUSION: Patient desire to be involved in treatment decisions was a key factor in explaining intention to use medication-related services. Identifying individuals with desire for involvement in treatment decisions may increase medication therapy management (MTM) participation. Strategies to provide personalized MTM services to these individuals should be developed and evaluated.


Assuntos
Participação da Comunidade , Conduta do Tratamento Medicamentoso , Idoso , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Doença Crônica , Aconselhamento , Estudos Transversais , Custos de Medicamentos , Prescrições de Medicamentos , Feminino , Pesquisas sobre Atenção à Saúde , Humanos , Masculino , Michigan , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Satisfação do Paciente , Medicina de Precisão , Tamanho da Amostra , Fatores Socioeconômicos
14.
Pharmacy (Basel) ; 10(4)2022 Jun 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35893705

RESUMO

This study applied a human factors and ergonomics approach to describe community-based pharmacy personnel perspectives regarding how work environment characteristics affect the ability to perform the duties necessary for optimal patient care and how contributors to stress affect the ability to ensure patient safety. Data were obtained from the 2021 APhA/NASPA National State-Based Pharmacy Workplace Survey, launched in the United States in April 2021. Promotion of the online survey to pharmacists and pharmacy technicians was accomplished through social media, email, and online periodicals. Responses continued to be received through the end of 2021. A data file containing 6973 responses was downloaded on 7 January 2022 for analysis. Qualitative thematic analysis was applied for developing operational definitions and coding guidelines for content analysis of the data. The patterns of responses for the dependent variables were compared among community-based practice setting types (chain, supermarket/mass merchandiser, and independent) and work positions (manager, staff pharmacist, technician/clerk, and owner). Chi-square analysis was used for determining statistically significant differences. The findings showed that personnel working in community-based pharmacies reported undesirable work environments and work stress that affected their ability to perform assigned duties for optimal patient care and ensure patient safety. Four work system elements were identified that were both facilitators and barriers to the ability to perform duties and ensure patient safety: (1) people, (2) tasks, (3) technology/tools, and (4) organizational context. Acknowledging local contexts of workplaces, giving adequate control, applying adaptive thinking, enhancing connectivity, building on existing mechanisms, and dynamic continuous learning are key elements for applying the HFE (human factors ergonomics) approach to improving the experience of providing care in community-based pharmacies.

15.
Pharmacy (Basel) ; 10(6)2022 Nov 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36548314

RESUMO

This study applied a hermeneutic phenomenological approach to better understand pharmacy workplace wellbeing and resilience using respondents' written comments along with a blend of the researchers' understanding of the phenomenon and the published literature. Our goal was to apply this understanding to recommendations for the pharmacy workforce and corresponding future research. Data were obtained from the 2021 APhA/NASPA National State-Based Pharmacy Workplace Survey, launched in the United States in April 2021. Promotion of the online survey to pharmacy personnel was accomplished through social media, email, and online periodicals. Responses continued to be received through the end of 2021. A data file containing 6973 responses was downloaded on 7 January 2022 for analysis. Usable responses were from those who wrote an in-depth comment detailing stories and experiences related to pharmacy workplace and resilience. There were 614 respondents who wrote such comments. The findings revealed that business models driven by mechanized assembly line processes, business metrics that supersede patient outcomes, and reduction of pharmacy personnel's professional judgement have contributed to the decline in the experience of providing patient care in today's health systems. The portrait of respondents' lived experiences regarding pharmacy workplace wellbeing and resilience was beyond the individual level and revealed the need for systems change. We propose several areas for expanded inquiry in this domain: (1) shared trauma, (2) professional responsibility and autonomy, (3) learned subjection, (4) moral injury and moral distress, (5) sociocultural effects, and (6) health systems change.

16.
Res Social Adm Pharm ; 18(10): 3821-3830, 2022 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35466066

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Job stress, burnout, and fulfillment can be modeled using the Job Demands and Resources model (JD-R). OBJECTIVE: This study explores the relationship between job demands and burnout and professional fulfillment in pharmacists, and the moderating role of job resources. METHODS: Data were obtained from the 2019 National Pharmacist Workforce Survey of a random sample of U.S. licensed pharmacists. The survey assessed pharmacist demographics (age, gender, and work setting), job demands (workload and work-home conflict), job resources (job control, time spent in various work activities, and social support), as well as burnout and professional fulfillment. Hierarchical regression analyses were used to assess the relationship between job demands-resources variables and pharmacists' professional fulfillment and burnout. Moderation was assessed by including interaction terms (job demands x job resources) in the regression models. The change in marginal mean burnout and professional fulfillment for different combinations of job demands and job resources was used to assess the salience of significant moderation effects. RESULTS: Women and community pharmacists accounted for 64.8% and 45.8% of the study sample, respectively. Age was negatively associated with burnout. Job demands were positively associated with burnout and negatively associated with professional fulfillment, and the converse was true for job resources. Significant moderation effects were observed for 7 out of 12 interaction terms assessed. The moderating effect of job resources was more salient under varying conditions of job demands in 5 out of 7 instances where significant interaction effects were observed. CONCLUSION: While pharmacist characteristics explained a significant amount of variation in burnout and professional fulfillment, also considering the moderating effects of job resources on the association of job demands with burnout and professional fulfillment identified additional information, such as the increased importance of job control and task variety in high workload environments.


Assuntos
Esgotamento Profissional , Farmacêuticos , Esgotamento Profissional/epidemiologia , Feminino , Humanos , Satisfação no Emprego , Inquéritos e Questionários , Carga de Trabalho , Local de Trabalho
17.
Am J Pharm Educ ; 85(9): 8583, 2021 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34301554

RESUMO

Health disparities continue to exist in the United States, with the most significant differences in care occurring between racial groups. Racial health disparities are largely a result of the strong association between race and structural inequities, (differentials in the distribution of power, resources, opportunities). The use of case-based learning is common practice in pharmacy education, and the race of the patient who is the subject of the case is often included out of convention. In some cases, race is included to inform treatment based on guidelines developed from epidemiological and clinical studies that link race to disease by conferring biological significance to race categories. This continuing use of race and ethnicity to guide treatment contributes to racial health disparities and may further perpetuate existing provider implicit bias. This paper discusses the pedagogical approach of using patient cases and the convention, propriety, and implications of including race in patient cases, and guides pharmacy educators in how to use information on race.


Assuntos
Educação em Farmácia , Etnicidade , Viés Implícito , Disparidades em Assistência à Saúde , Humanos , Grupos Raciais , Estados Unidos
18.
Am J Pharm Educ ; 85(9): 8586, 2021 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34301557

RESUMO

Objective To analyze the ethnic and racial diversity of faculty in pharmacy, medicine, and dentistry in the United States and suggest how the pipeline for pharmacy academe can be diversified.Methods A retrospective analysis of the representativeness of faculty at schools and colleges of pharmacy was compared to that in schools and colleges of medicine and dentistry. The range of ethnic and racial diversity across top schools of pharmacy, historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs), and newer schools of pharmacy was evaluated for both faculty and students for the year 2019-2020. The ethnic and racial diversity in residency and fellowship programs along with graduation rates provided insight into the available pipeline for future pharmacy faculty.Results Faculty in pharmacy, medicine, and dentistry demonstrated similarly low representation of underrepresented minorities (URMs) compared to their composition within the US population. Dentistry had the largest percentage of URMs (13.9%), compared with 8.5% in pharmacy and 7.1% in medicine. Five HBCUs contributed 32.8% of all Black faculty, yet their graduates had comparatively low residency match rates. The ratio of URM students to non-URM students in post-PharmD and graduate training programs is lower than the ratio of URM students to non-URM students in pharmacy programs.Conclusion Lack of access to postgraduate residency or fellowship training programs is a major barrier to progression to pharmacy academe and impacts URMs more significantly. Barriers to advanced training must be removed or decreased to create the needed diverse faculty candidates for pharmacy academe. Without intervention, students in pharmacy programs will be primarily trained by non-URM faculty, which may impact how graduates provide care in an increasingly diverse patient population.


Assuntos
Educação em Farmácia , Docentes de Farmácia , Diversidade Cultural , Etnicidade , Humanos , Grupos Minoritários , Estudos Retrospectivos , Estados Unidos
19.
Pharmacy (Basel) ; 9(2)2021 May 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34066593

RESUMO

Labor market forces in pharmacy are affected by frictional unemployment (job turnover), structural employment forces that require new skill sets for employees, and hiring practices that integrate technology or less costly labor such as pharmacy technicians. The objectives of this study were to describe hiring trends for both the pharmacist and technician workforces in licensed pharmacies on a biennial basis from 2006 through 2020 using data collected in Minnesota. Ecological comparisons were made between the survey years using descriptive statistics. For open-ended questions added to the 2020 survey, content analysis was applied. Demand for technicians increased which might be due to the expansion of their roles into activities that had been reserved for the pharmacist. Pharmacies reportedly would like to hire pharmacists to meet the demand for new services that pharmacists can provide. However, respondents articulated that this is not feasible under current economic pressures. This represents a lost opportunity for transformation in pharmacy that would establish pharmacists' roles in the rapidly transforming health care value chain. We conclude that hiring dynamics in pharmacies are being driven more by economic and organizational shifts than meeting the demand for services that pharmacists can provide.

20.
Pharmacy (Basel) ; 9(1)2021 Jan 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33451045

RESUMO

National Pharmacist Workforce Studies (NPWS) have been conducted in the U.S. every five years since 2000. This article describes the online survey methods used for the latest NPWS conducted in 2019 and provides an assessment for nonresponse bias. Three waves of emails containing a link to the online survey were sent to a random sample of about 96,000 pharmacists licensed in the United States. The survey asked about pharmacist employment, work activities, work-life balance, practice characteristics, pharmacist demographics and training. A total of 5467 usable responses were received, for a usable response rate of 5.8%. To assess for nonresponse bias, respondent characteristics were compared to the population of U.S. pharmacists and a benchmark, while a wave analysis compared early and late respondents. The pharmacist sample-population comparison and the benchmark comparison showed that the NPWS respondents had a higher percentage of female pharmacists and a lower proportion of young pharmacists compared to the population of U.S. pharmacists and the benchmark sample. In some contrast, the wave analysis showed that the early respondents had a higher percentage of males and older pharmacists compared to the late respondents. Both the wave analysis and the benchmark comparison showed that the NPWS respondents (and early respondents) had a lower percent of pharmacists with a PharmD degree than did the late respondents and the benchmark group. These differences should be considered when interpreting the findings from the 2019 NPWS.

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