Pharmacy Practice in the South Dakota Correctional System

Pharmacists must be prepared to care for populations where health disparities are greatest and their services can best impact public health needs. Such preparation requires that students have access to practice experiences in underserved environments where pharmacy practice, cultural competence and...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chamika Hawkins-Taylor, Angeline M Carlson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing 2018-11-01
Series:INNOVATIONS in Pharmacy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pubs.lib.umn.edu/index.php/innovations/article/view/994
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spelling doaj-f5a32f6f06f7403fa5a38b61f5d85c1e2020-11-25T03:24:57ZengUniversity of Minnesota Libraries PublishingINNOVATIONS in Pharmacy2155-04172018-11-019410.24926/iip.v9i4.994Pharmacy Practice in the South Dakota Correctional SystemChamika Hawkins-Taylor0Angeline M Carlson1South Dakota State UniversityUniversity of Minnesota College of Pharmacy Pharmacists must be prepared to care for populations where health disparities are greatest and their services can best impact public health needs. Such preparation requires that students have access to practice experiences in underserved environments where pharmacy practice, cultural competence and knowledge of population health are experienced simultaneously. The correctional facility is such a place. The American Society of Health-System Pharmacists recommends that students receive preceptorship opportunities within the correctional system.  The occasional collaboration or experiential opportunity, like Kingston’s early model, has occurred between health professional schools and correctional facilities. However, to date, the correctional facility-experiential site remains an untapped opportunity, at least in a complete, coordinated, pharmaceutical care, patient management framework. Consequently, a short research study asked: To what extent is there potential for correctional facilities to serve as experiential practice sites for pharmacy students? The research objective was to identify pharmaceutical practices within South Dakota correctional system and compare those practices to the guidelines established by the Association of American College of Pharmacy’s as optimal for student training. To understand medical and pharmaceutical practices in SDPS, three South Dakota Adult prison facilities were included in the exploratory study.  Data was collected through a mixed methods approach designed to obtain perspectives about the SDPS health care system from individuals representing the numerous job levels and roles that exist within the health care continuum. Interviews and a web-based surveys were used to collect data.  A review of a 36-page transcript along with 498 freeform survey comments revealed that while exact themes from the Exemplary Practice Framework may not have been evident, related words or synonyms for patient-centered care, informatics, public health, medication therapy management, and quality improvement appeared with great frequency.   Article type: Original Research https://pubs.lib.umn.edu/index.php/innovations/article/view/994disparitiespharmacy practiceexperiential educationpopulation health
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chamika Hawkins-Taylor
Angeline M Carlson
spellingShingle Chamika Hawkins-Taylor
Angeline M Carlson
Pharmacy Practice in the South Dakota Correctional System
INNOVATIONS in Pharmacy
disparities
pharmacy practice
experiential education
population health
author_facet Chamika Hawkins-Taylor
Angeline M Carlson
author_sort Chamika Hawkins-Taylor
title Pharmacy Practice in the South Dakota Correctional System
title_short Pharmacy Practice in the South Dakota Correctional System
title_full Pharmacy Practice in the South Dakota Correctional System
title_fullStr Pharmacy Practice in the South Dakota Correctional System
title_full_unstemmed Pharmacy Practice in the South Dakota Correctional System
title_sort pharmacy practice in the south dakota correctional system
publisher University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing
series INNOVATIONS in Pharmacy
issn 2155-0417
publishDate 2018-11-01
description Pharmacists must be prepared to care for populations where health disparities are greatest and their services can best impact public health needs. Such preparation requires that students have access to practice experiences in underserved environments where pharmacy practice, cultural competence and knowledge of population health are experienced simultaneously. The correctional facility is such a place. The American Society of Health-System Pharmacists recommends that students receive preceptorship opportunities within the correctional system.  The occasional collaboration or experiential opportunity, like Kingston’s early model, has occurred between health professional schools and correctional facilities. However, to date, the correctional facility-experiential site remains an untapped opportunity, at least in a complete, coordinated, pharmaceutical care, patient management framework. Consequently, a short research study asked: To what extent is there potential for correctional facilities to serve as experiential practice sites for pharmacy students? The research objective was to identify pharmaceutical practices within South Dakota correctional system and compare those practices to the guidelines established by the Association of American College of Pharmacy’s as optimal for student training. To understand medical and pharmaceutical practices in SDPS, three South Dakota Adult prison facilities were included in the exploratory study.  Data was collected through a mixed methods approach designed to obtain perspectives about the SDPS health care system from individuals representing the numerous job levels and roles that exist within the health care continuum. Interviews and a web-based surveys were used to collect data.  A review of a 36-page transcript along with 498 freeform survey comments revealed that while exact themes from the Exemplary Practice Framework may not have been evident, related words or synonyms for patient-centered care, informatics, public health, medication therapy management, and quality improvement appeared with great frequency.   Article type: Original Research
topic disparities
pharmacy practice
experiential education
population health
url https://pubs.lib.umn.edu/index.php/innovations/article/view/994
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