The impact of professional socialisation on pharmacy students' role perceptions

Author:

Collins David M1,Benson Heather A E1,Occhipinti Stefano2,Wright Anthony3,Mcelnay James C4

Affiliation:

1. School of Pharmacy, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

2. School of Applied Psychology, Griffith University, Brisbane

3. Department of Physiotherapy, University of Queensland, Brisbane

4. School of Pharmacy, The Queen's University of Belfast, Northern Ireland

Abstract

Abstract Objective To evaluate pharmacy students' perceptions of the relative status of seven health professional groups: dentists, general medical practitioners (GPs), medical specialists, nurses, pharmacists, physiotherapists and social workers Method A 56-item questionnaire was sent to 389 pharmacy undergraduate students, from the University of Queensland, Australia, and the Queen's University of Belfast, Northern Ireland Key findings In comparison with their Australian counterparts, students from Northern Ireland rated pharmacists significantly higher, and GPs, medical specialists, physiotherapists, and social workers significantly lower, on a measure of overall professional status. Respondents also rated pharmacists significantly higher, and GPs, physiotherapists and social workers significantly lower, on a professional potency dimension to the status measure. However, both student groups ranked pharmacists first on a receptivity dimension to the status measure, indicating their perception of pharmacy as an empathetic profession. Medical specialists were uniformly rated highest of the professions on the potency dimension and lowest on receptivity Conclusion It is posited that differences between the students' perceptions of the health professionals reflect both cultural and educational differences

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy,Pharmaceutical Science,Pharmacy

Reference36 articles.

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2. Norm committment and conformity to role-status obligations;Goode;Am J Sociol,1960

3. Professionalization and bureaucratization;Hall;Am Soc Rev,1968

4. The importance of education and practice factors in determining stress and strain among young pharmacy practitioners;Curtiss;Am J Pharm Educ,1978

5. Pharmacy students revisited as pharmacists;Kirk;Am J Pharm Educ,1976

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