Abstract

The pharmacy academy works collectively to serve the educational needs of diverse stakeholders by promulgating expectations for professional programs to achieve standards for both practice and professional development. Building systems thinking into the learning process, with its associative benefits to postgraduate preparation and lifelong practice, offers a pathway to achieve this educational mission. The concept of systems citizenship has been suggested as a process for helping health professional students incorporate a meaningful professional identity and responsibly seek out an understanding of the connections between patients, communities, and the larger institutions and environments that affect each. Drawing on the discipline of systems thinking, the student and pharmacist learn to be effective locally by thinking globally. Systems thinking, a basis for effective citizenship, is a proactive and shared approach to problem-solving that integrates professional identity with the goal of closing gaps in care. Pharmacy colleges/schools provide an opportune forum for educating professional students and postgraduates with the knowledge, skills, and abilities critical to becoming valuable and contributing systems citizens.

Full Text
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