APPE unreadiness - The other side of the coin

Curr Pharm Teach Learn. 2024 May;16(5):297-299. doi: 10.1016/j.cptl.2024.02.003. Epub 2024 Apr 8.

Abstract

Introduction: Student readiness for Advanced Pharmacy Practice Experiences (APPEs) has not been explicitly defined in literature or standards. Readiness for APPEs is a programmatic requirement of all schools and colleges of pharmacy (schools), leaving schools to determine their own assessments of APPE readiness. Current literature provides no consensus on the definition of APPE readiness nor the assessments or benchmarks used to evaluate APPE readiness. Schools have an opportunity to improve efforts to identify students at risk for poor APPE performance and provide early intervention.

Commentary: Due to a lack of consensus, it may be easier to describe students who are not ready for APPEs than it is to describe students who are APPE ready. APPE unreadiness is defined by the authors as those who require significant preceptor instruction on foundational competencies such as knowledge, skills, and/or attitudes and therefore are unable to meaningfully engage in application-based patient care activities. By adding focus to APPE unreadiness within APPE readiness programs, pharmacy schools may be able to more readily identify and remediate students who are at risk of failing one or more APPE rotations.

Implications: We provide four recommendations for schools to consider. These are focused on assessing APPE readiness to qualify and quantify APPE unready students. By assessing APPE unreadiness, schools can make continuous quality improvement to ensure that preceptors, sites, students, and faculty can have the ongoing confidence that APPE students are all ready to meaningfully engage on rotation.

Keywords: APPE readiness; Advanced pharmacy practice experiences; Assessment; Curriculum; Experiential education.

MeSH terms

  • Curriculum
  • Education, Pharmacy*
  • Humans
  • Pharmaceutical Services*
  • Pharmacy*
  • Problem-Based Learning