The development of a marker system for Pharmacists’ Behavioural Skills

Author:

Smith Samantha Eve12ORCID,Kerins Joanne13,McColgan-Smith Scott4,Stewart Fiona4,Power Ailsa4,Mardon Julie1,Tallentire Victoria Ruth1245

Affiliation:

1. Scottish Centre for Simulation and Clinical Human Factors , Larbert , UK

2. NHS Lothian , Edinburgh, UK

3. NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde , Glasgow, UK

4. NHS Education for Scotland , Edinburgh, UK

5. University of Edinburgh , Edinburgh, UK

Abstract

Abstract Objectives Pharmacists increasingly require complex behavioural skills to fulfil enhanced roles within healthcare teams. Behavioural marker systems are used to assess behavioural (or non-technical) skills during immersive simulation. This study aimed to develop a marker system for pharmacists’ behavioural skills in patient-focussed care scenarios, and to investigate its content validity. Methods Literature describing existing marker systems and the requisite behavioural skills of pharmacists were presented to two expert panels, alongside video examples of pharmacists in patient-focussed care simulations. The expert panels used this information to develop a new behavioural marker system. A third expert panel assessed the content validity, and the item- and scale-content validity indices were calculated. Key findings The resulting tool contains four categories, each with three or four skill elements: situation awareness (gathering information; recognising and understanding information; anticipating, preparing and planning), decision-making and prioritisation (identifying options; prioritising; dealing with uncertainty; implementing or reviewing decisions), collaborative working (involving the patient; information sharing; leadership or followership), self-awareness (role awareness; speaking up; escalating care; coping with stress). The scale-content validity index was 0.95 (ideal) and the only item below the acceptable cut-off was ‘leadership or followership’ (0.7). Conclusions This tool is the first marker system designed to assess the behavioural skills of pharmacists in patient-focussed care scenarios. There is evidence of good content validity. It is hoped that once validated, the Pharmacists’ Behavioural Skills marker system will enable pharmacy educators to provide individualised and meaningful feedback on simulation participants’ behavioural skills.

Funder

NHS Education for Scotland

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

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

Reference39 articles.

1. Safety at the Sharp End

2. Simulation-based training: applications in clinical pharmacy;Lloyd;Clin Pharm,2018

3. Which non-technical skills do junior doctors require to prescribe safely? A systematic review;Dearden;Br J Clin Pharmacol,2015

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