Abstract

Objective. To further refine and examine the validity of an instrument for assessing pharmacy students' self-efficacy in implementing the Pharmacists' Patient Care Process (PPCP) components.Methods. An instrument was developed and pilot tested in spring 2018 at one college of pharmacy. In spring 2019, a modified version of the instrument, the PPCP Self-Efficacy Scale (PPCP-SES), was administered to third professional year (P3) pharmacy students at seven institutions. Self-efficacy items were based on Bandura's theory of self-efficacy, and students were asked to rate each item on a continuous scale (0-100). Data analyses included descriptive statistics, reliability analysis, and confirmatory factor analysis (CFA).Results. Three hundred P3 students completed the PPCP-SES. The domain-specific Cronbach alpha coefficients were: collect, α=.89; assess, α=.92; plan, α=.95; implement, α=.96; and follow-up, α=.95. Based on the factor analysis results, three items were removed. Model fit statistics indicated the overall instrument had moderate goodness of fit.Conclusion. Results indicate the PPCP-SES demonstrated initial evidence of validity for use by pharmacy faculty members to identify students' self-efficacy related to implementing components of the PPCP. Future research is needed to examine validity evidence in other student populations and among practicing pharmacists.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call