Park Jamie Y, Min Jason
Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of British Columbia. Vancouver, BC, (Canada).
BSc(Pharm), RPh. Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of British Columbia. Vancouver, BC, (Canada).
Pharm Pract (Granada). 2020 Jan-Mar;18(1):1747. doi: 10.18549/PharmPract.2020.1.1747. Epub 2020 Mar 16.
While much has been described about technology use by digital natives in general, understanding of pharmacy student's knowledge and understanding of technology is lacking.
This study explores the current state of pharmacy students' self-rated digital health literacy in British Columbia, Canada, and seeks to identify future opportunities for technology training in pharmacy education and in practice.
A mixed methods design using surveys and semi-structured interviews was conducted. An online, validated survey (eHEALS) was conducted among currently enrolled 2 to 4 year pharmacy students at the University of British Columbia. An additional interview was offered to consenting participants to further explore the use of technology in daily lives, pharmacy practicums, and implications on future pharmacy curricula. Both quantitative and qualitative thematic analysis was done of all data.
A total of 30 pharmacy students completed the eHEALS survey and 5 completed interviews. Most participants were 2 year students (50%), were 25 years and younger (80%), and female (87%). Ranking of digital health literacy was lower than expected with participants stating they know what (87%), where (87%) and how to find (77%) health resources on the Internet. Even less students (77%) rated that they have the skills to evaluate the health resources that they find on the Internet and only 53% felt confident in using information from the Internet to make health decisions. Most students mentioned that they had limited technology related training at school and would like more training opportunities throughout their program and connect what they have learned at school to their practice.
These results expose significant and surprising gaps in student understanding of technology despite modifications seen in the entry-to-practice PharmD curriculum. Regional differences and digital health literacy of practicing pharmacists are areas that require better understanding and hold significant impact as practice evolves.
虽然人们对数字原生代使用技术的情况已有诸多描述,但对于药学专业学生对技术的了解和认识仍存在不足。
本研究探讨加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省药学专业学生自评数字健康素养的现状,并试图确定药学教育和实践中技术培训的未来机会。
采用调查和半结构化访谈的混合方法设计。对英属哥伦比亚大学目前就读的二至四年级药学专业学生进行了一项经过验证的在线调查(eHEALS)。此外,还对同意参与的参与者进行了访谈,以进一步探讨技术在日常生活、药学实习中的使用情况以及对未来药学课程的影响。对所有数据进行了定量和定性主题分析。
共有30名药学专业学生完成了eHEALS调查,5名学生完成了访谈。大多数参与者是二年级学生(50%),年龄在25岁及以下(80%),女性(87%)。数字健康素养排名低于预期,参与者表示他们知道在互联网上什么(87%)、哪里(87%)以及如何找到(77%)健康资源。甚至更少的学生(77%)认为他们有能力评估在互联网上找到的健康资源,只有53%的学生对使用互联网信息做出健康决策有信心。大多数学生提到他们在学校接受的技术相关培训有限,希望在整个课程中有更多培训机会,并将在学校学到的知识与实践联系起来。
尽管药学博士入学课程有所改进,但这些结果揭示了学生在技术理解方面存在重大且令人惊讶的差距。执业药师的地区差异和数字健康素养是随着实践发展需要更好理解且具有重大影响的领域。