Abstract

An ambulatory care certificate program tailored to meet the educational needs of Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) and Navy pharmacists is described. In 1992, the College of pharmacy, University of Illinois at Chicago, worked with the VA and the Navy to design an ambulatory care certificate program for pharmacists in VA and Navy hospitals. The pilot course consisted of 103 hours of didactic and experiential education. The 10 didactic modules covered both disease management and clinical skills. The experiential component incorporated pharmaceutical care steps as applied to therapeutic areas taught in the course. Although the pilot course met most of the original objectives, several unanticipated problems emerged, including distance learning issues, the number of hours for completing the course requirements, learner variance, the impact of institutional support on participants' academic success, participants' difficulty in assimilating education into practice, and difficulty with the clinical evaluation tool developed for the course. The course was modified over the next year to address these problems. Now in its fourth year, the course is offered nationally to the VA and the Department of Defense. In the first three years, 72 of 99 enrolled pharmacists completed the course. An ambulatory care certificate program helps Navy and VA pharmacists develop patient care skills.

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