Measuring the proportion of time spent on work activities of clinical pharmacists using work sampling technique at a public hospital in Malaysia

Background: The clinical pharmacy service to the ward was established in 2005 in Malaysia, as the number of pharmacists working in the public service sector began to grow. Yet, there has been little local research done on reporting the range of work activities of clinical pharmacists and the amount...

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Main Authors: Kian K. Kong, Siew C. Ong, Guat S. Ooi, Mohamed A. Hassali
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centro de Investigaciones y Publicaciones Farmaceuticas 2021-09-01
Series:Pharmacy Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.pharmacypractice.org/journal/index.php/pp/article/view/2469
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spelling doaj-5d2460ddca3d4d78a4cf51f94701d44c2021-09-05T10:26:29ZengCentro de Investigaciones y Publicaciones FarmaceuticasPharmacy Practice1885-642X1886-36552021-09-01193246910.18549/PharmPract.2021.3.2469 Measuring the proportion of time spent on work activities of clinical pharmacists using work sampling technique at a public hospital in Malaysia Kian K. Kong https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9338-3340Siew C. Onghttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-9750-9588Guat S. Ooi https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1853-3721Mohamed A. Hassali https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8269-885XBackground: The clinical pharmacy service to the ward was established in 2005 in Malaysia, as the number of pharmacists working in the public service sector began to grow. Yet, there has been little local research done on reporting the range of work activities of clinical pharmacists and the amount of time that they spent on their work activities. Objective: This study aimed to identify the range of work activities of clinical pharmacists by observation and to estimate the proportion of time spent on different work activities by using the work sampling technique. Methods: The time spent by clinical pharmacists on various activities was measured using the work sampling technique over 30 working days. The work activities of clinical pharmacists were pre-identified and customized into an activity checklist. Two observers were placed at the study site and took turns recording the activities performed by the clinical pharmacists by following a randomly generated observation schedule. Results: 1,455 observations were made on five clinical pharmacists with a total of 3493 events recorded. Overall, clinical pharmacists spent 78.8% (n=2751) of their time providing clinical services whereas 12.3% (n=433) of their time was spent on non-clinical activities. They were found to be idle from work for 8.9% of the time. There was no difference in bed occupancy rate in the study site regardless of the presence of the observer (p=0.384). Clinical pharmacists were found to report a higher average daily cumulative work unit of 9.8 (SD=4.3) when under observation compared to an average daily cumulative work unit of 6.5 (SD=4.6) when no observer was present (p=0.005). Conclusions: The results revealed that clinical pharmacists spent a significant amount of time on non-clinical work. Their responsibilities with non-clinical work should be properly taken care of so they can allocate more time to providing patient care.https://www.pharmacypractice.org/journal/index.php/pp/article/view/2469pharmacistsprofessional practiceworkloadclinical competencepharmacy service hospitalquality of health careobservationmanagement auditbehavior observation techniquesmalaysia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kian K. Kong
Siew C. Ong
Guat S. Ooi
Mohamed A. Hassali
spellingShingle Kian K. Kong
Siew C. Ong
Guat S. Ooi
Mohamed A. Hassali
Measuring the proportion of time spent on work activities of clinical pharmacists using work sampling technique at a public hospital in Malaysia
Pharmacy Practice
pharmacists
professional practice
workload
clinical competence
pharmacy service hospital
quality of health care
observation
management audit
behavior observation techniques
malaysia
author_facet Kian K. Kong
Siew C. Ong
Guat S. Ooi
Mohamed A. Hassali
author_sort Kian K. Kong
title Measuring the proportion of time spent on work activities of clinical pharmacists using work sampling technique at a public hospital in Malaysia
title_short Measuring the proportion of time spent on work activities of clinical pharmacists using work sampling technique at a public hospital in Malaysia
title_full Measuring the proportion of time spent on work activities of clinical pharmacists using work sampling technique at a public hospital in Malaysia
title_fullStr Measuring the proportion of time spent on work activities of clinical pharmacists using work sampling technique at a public hospital in Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Measuring the proportion of time spent on work activities of clinical pharmacists using work sampling technique at a public hospital in Malaysia
title_sort measuring the proportion of time spent on work activities of clinical pharmacists using work sampling technique at a public hospital in malaysia
publisher Centro de Investigaciones y Publicaciones Farmaceuticas
series Pharmacy Practice
issn 1885-642X
1886-3655
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Background: The clinical pharmacy service to the ward was established in 2005 in Malaysia, as the number of pharmacists working in the public service sector began to grow. Yet, there has been little local research done on reporting the range of work activities of clinical pharmacists and the amount of time that they spent on their work activities. Objective: This study aimed to identify the range of work activities of clinical pharmacists by observation and to estimate the proportion of time spent on different work activities by using the work sampling technique. Methods: The time spent by clinical pharmacists on various activities was measured using the work sampling technique over 30 working days. The work activities of clinical pharmacists were pre-identified and customized into an activity checklist. Two observers were placed at the study site and took turns recording the activities performed by the clinical pharmacists by following a randomly generated observation schedule. Results: 1,455 observations were made on five clinical pharmacists with a total of 3493 events recorded. Overall, clinical pharmacists spent 78.8% (n=2751) of their time providing clinical services whereas 12.3% (n=433) of their time was spent on non-clinical activities. They were found to be idle from work for 8.9% of the time. There was no difference in bed occupancy rate in the study site regardless of the presence of the observer (p=0.384). Clinical pharmacists were found to report a higher average daily cumulative work unit of 9.8 (SD=4.3) when under observation compared to an average daily cumulative work unit of 6.5 (SD=4.6) when no observer was present (p=0.005). Conclusions: The results revealed that clinical pharmacists spent a significant amount of time on non-clinical work. Their responsibilities with non-clinical work should be properly taken care of so they can allocate more time to providing patient care.
topic pharmacists
professional practice
workload
clinical competence
pharmacy service hospital
quality of health care
observation
management audit
behavior observation techniques
malaysia
url https://www.pharmacypractice.org/journal/index.php/pp/article/view/2469
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