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Anne Marie Bott, PharmD, BCOP, BCPS IHS Alaska Area Oncology Pharmacist Infusion Center Pharmacy Manager Alaska Native Medical Center Courtney Klatt, PharmD, MBA, BCPS Pediatric Pharmacist Alaska Native Medical Center PRECEPTING STUDENTS AND RESIDENTS

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Page 1: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

Anne Marie Bott, PharmD, BCOP, BCPS

IHS Alaska Area Oncology Pharmacist

Infusion Center Pharmacy Manager

Alaska Native Medical Center

Courtney Klatt, PharmD, MBA, BCPS

Pediatric Pharmacist

Alaska Native Medical Center

PRECEPTING STUDENTS

AND RESIDENTS

Page 2: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

◼No conflicts of interest to disclose.

DISCLOSURES

Page 3: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

◼Identify the four preceptor roles as defined by the

American Society of Health-System Pharmacists (ASHP)

◼Produce learning objectives for the learning experience

◼Produce learning activities based on the individual

preceptor roles

◼Illustrate effective feedback

OBJECTIVES

Page 4: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

1. What is the correct order of the four preceptor roles as defined by the American Society of Health -System Pharmacists?

a) modeling, instructing, coaching, facil itating

b) instructing, modeling, coaching facil itating

c) modeling, coaching, instructing, facil itating

d) instructing, coaching, modeling, facil itating

2. Which of the following is an objective?

a) Interact effectively with the health care teams to manage patients’ therapy.

b) Participate in daily rounds.

c) Identify medication-related problems and address them with the team.

d) Make evidence based recommendations.

PRE-TEST

Page 5: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

3. Learning activities should:

a) Be actionable

b) Specific

c) Explain how an objective will be met

d) All of the above

e) B and C

4. Feedback should be ____.

a) Given when you discuss an evaluation

b) At scheduled times

c) Constructive

d) B and C

e) All of the above

PRE-TEST CONTINUED

Page 6: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

Precepting

Instructing

Modeling

Coaching

Facilitating

Page 7: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

◼Builds clinical reasoning abilities

▪ Defined as “higher order thinking in which the health care

provider, guided by best evidence or theory, observes and

relates concepts and phenomena to develop an

understanding of their significance”.

IMPORTANCE OF PRECEPTOR ROLES

Page 8: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

Pattern recognition/nonanalytic reasoning

▪ Subconscious process

▪ Relate verbal and non-verbal input to a past experience

▪ Recognition of when a pattern doesn’t fit or apply

Analytical reasoning

▪ Controlled process

▪ Gathering knowledge – chart review, reading guidelines

▪ Applying logic and inference

Prevention of cognitive errors

▪ Awareness of potential biases and personal

strengths/weaknesses

3 PARTS OF CLINICAL REASONING

Page 9: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

NIMMO’S MODEL

Image From: Kristin W. Weitzel, Erika A. Walters, James Taylor, Teaching clinical problem solving: A preceptor’s guide, American Journal

of Health-System Pharmacy, Volume 69, Issue 18, 15 September 2012, Pages 1588–1599, https://doi.org/10.2146/ajhp110521

Page 10: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

◼Objective

▪ ASHP has these set for residents in the guidelines

▪ Observable, measurable statement describing what the

student or resident should be able to do by the end of

learning experience

▪ Can be created for students who are on rotation

◼Activity

▪ What the student or resident will do to help achieve the

objective

▪ Should be actionable

▪ Specific

OBJECTIVES VS. ACTIVITIES

Page 11: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

EXAMPLE FROM ASHP:

https://www.ashp.org/-/media/assets/professional-development/residencies/docs/learning-activity-

examples.ashx?la=en&hash=06B1F8664EB0FB03AFC3A07AC797CE7DBCD467A8

Manage aspects of the medication use process

related to formulary management.

• Review non-formulary drug requests to determine if meet

criteria for approval.

• When a non-formulary or “patient’s own drug” is prescribed,

ensure bar-coding of the medication is completed before

dispensing.

• Recommend formulary therapeutic alternatives for non-

formulary medications, as appropriate.

Page 12: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

◼Given the following as an Objective, create two learning

activities:

Prepare and dispense medications following best practices

and the organization’s policies and procedures .

DISCUSSION/ACTIVITY

Page 13: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

INSTRUCTING

Providing information that is necessary to acquire before skills can be applied or performed

necessary information

clear instructions

foundational learning

Page 14: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

◼Provides foundational knowledge and skills to apply to patient care

◼Lectures

▪ Can include fictional case-based teaching

▪ Rarely used in clinical setting

◼Assigned readings

▪ Guidelines

▪ Site specific policies and procedures

INSTRUCTING

Page 15: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

◼Recommend guidelines

▪ Look up the most up to date guidelines

▪ If from various sources, compare them

▪ Results

▪ Expands knowledge or provides a refresher to fill in knowledge gaps

▪ Guidelines are applied to patients/disease states

▪ Leads to start of applying script theory

INSTRUCTING STEPS

Page 16: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

◼Application of script theory

▪ Brain organizes memories and knowledge as structures/scripts

▪ Review guidelines

▪ Review patient chart

▪ Apply guidelines to patient case

▪ Refinement and further development of knowledge base

▪ Develops non-analytic reasoning

◼Script Theory continues into the next preceptor role of modeling

SCRIPT THEORY

Page 17: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

◼Review medication counseling

▪ Common medications

▪ Compile important information into a document or table for

review

▪ Assesses and confirms prior knowledge

▪ Fills in knowledge gaps

◼Counseling expectations are reviewed

STUDENT INSTRUCTING SCENARIO

Page 18: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

◼Resident verifying new orders

▪ Drug – indication appropriate?

▪ Dose: including compounding dilution

▪ Route: IVPB, IV, SQ, IM, PO etc.

▪ Rate

▪ Pre-medications: any necessary?

◼New order verification can also incorporate discussion of

guidelines when determining if all of the above are appropriate

RESIDENT INSTRUCTING SCENARIO

Page 19: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

MODELING

Demonstrating a

skill or process with

verbal cues to allow

learner to observe

thoughts or problem-

solving process.

demonstrating important processes

skill sets

verbal cues

problem-solving

Page 20: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

◼Providing an example for the learner to follow

▪ Also referred to as “active observation”

▪ Takes place during an actual situation

▪ Rounding

▪ Counseling

▪ Patient case discussion

◼Best used once the learner has foundational knowledge/skills

(instructing)

MODELING

Page 21: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

◼Think Out Loud

▪ Explain observations and thought processes

▪ Describe patterns and missing information if discussing a patient case

▪ Facilitates further development of scripts that were established during

instructing role

CONTINUATION OF SCRIPT THEORY

Page 22: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

STUDENT MODELING SCENARIO

Medication counseling

Preceptor talks through the counseling process

▪ Reviewing orders and filled medications

▪ Key points to educate patients on

▪ New patients vs those that have been on the medication

▪ Explain the process and thoughts or considerations

▪ Student observes counseling patient with preceptor

Page 23: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

Preceptor models process of verifying orders

Making sure to discuss thoughts out loud

Making sure to point out why something is not appropriate

with an order if it needs to be corrected and why

RESIDENT MODELING SCENARIO

Page 24: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

COACHING

Allow learner to

perform a skill while

observing and

providing any

necessary feedback. support

feedback

guidance

Page 25: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

◼Learner performs a task or skill that was previously modeled for

them

◼Provides situations for supervised, practical experiences

◼Provide feedback and direction that allows refinement of skill or

knowledge

▪ Make sure to give timely feedback to reinforce good habits and

prevent bad habits

COACHING

Page 26: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

FACILITATING

Allow the learner to

perform independently

while remaining

available if needed

and for debriefing

afterwards.

observe provide

assistance if needed

debrief

Page 27: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

◼Observe learner in performing specified duties as appropriate

◼Ensure two-way communication during facilitation

▪ Learner asks questions as needed

◼Engage learner in self-assessment

FACILITATING

Page 28: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

◼Continue to perform tasks or skills that were modeled and

coached

◼Provide an opportunity for the learner to evaluate their own

progress

▪ Helps learners develop a habit of evaluating their own

behaviors and clinical skills

◼Leads into feedback

SELF-ASSESSMENT DURING FACILITATING

Page 29: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

◼Exchange of information from preceptor to student or resident

that describes their performance

◼ Is not an “evaluation”

▪ Usually done at the end of a learning experience or APPE

rotation.

▪ Renders judgement on where the student or resident is in

their development/learning

◼ Avoid vague or misleading statements

WHAT IS FEEDBACK?

Page 30: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

1. Timing

Agree upon a time for discussion

Encourages a team approach

2. Preparation

Make notes on strengths/weaknesses and performance

Use a grading sheet/scale

Examples: rubric, checklist, rating scale

3. Discuss strengths

Avoid statements like “you did great” because it makes

discussing weaknesses difficult

STEPS FOR PROVIDING EFFECTIVE FEEDBACK

Page 31: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

4. Discuss weaknesses

Limit the number of weaknesses so they are not

overwhelmed and can focus on an area or two

5. Set goals

Discuss what to improve on in future

Create a plan that will help aid in improvement

6. Follow-up

Repeat steps 1-5 emphasizing area for improvement from

step 5 the previous time

STEPS FOR PROVIDING EFFECTIVE FEEDBACK

Page 32: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

1. What is the correct order of the four preceptor roles as

defined by the American Society of Health -System

Pharmacists?

a) modeling, instructing, coaching, facilitating

b) instructing, modeling, coaching, facilitating

c) modeling, coaching, instructing, facilitating

d) instructing, coaching, modeling, facilitating

POST-TEST QUESTION 1

Page 33: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

1. What is the correct order of the four preceptor roles as

defined by the American Society of Health -System

Pharmacists?

a) modeling, instructing, coaching, facilitating

b) instructing, modeling, coaching, facilitating

c) modeling, coaching, instructing, facilitating

d) instructing, coaching, modeling, facilitating

POST-TEST QUESTION 1 ANSWER

Page 34: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

2. Which of the following is an objective?

a) Interact effectively with the health care teams to manage

patients’ therapy.

b) Participate in daily rounds.

c) Identify medication-related problems and address them

with the tea

d) Make evidence based recommendations.

POST-TEST QUESTION 2

Page 35: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

2. Which of the following is an objective?

a) Interact effectively with the health care teams to manage

patients’ therapy.

b) Participate in daily rounds.

c) Identify medication-related problems and address them

with the team

d) Make evidence based recommendations.

POST-TEST QUESTION 2 ANSWER

Page 36: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

3. Learning activities should:

a) Be actionable

b) Specific

c) Explain how an objective will be met

d) All of the above

e) B and C

POST-TEST QUESTION 3

Page 37: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

3. Learning activities should:

a) Be actionable

b) Specific

c) Explain how an objective will be met

d) All of the above

e) B and C

POST-TEST QUESTION 3 ANSWER

Page 38: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

4. Feedback should be ___.

a) Given when you discuss an evaluation

b) At scheduled times

c) Constructive

d) B and C

e) All of the above

POST-TEST QUESTION 4

Page 39: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

4. Feedback should be ___.

a) Given when you discuss an evaluation

b) At scheduled times

c) Constructive

d) B and C

e) All of the above

POST-TEST QUESTION 4 ANSWER

Page 40: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

QUESTIONS / DISCUSSION

Page 41: Precepting Students and residents · Precepting Instructing Modeling Coaching Facilitating ... Also referred to as “active observation” Takes place during an actual situation

◼Lynne M Sylvia, A lesson in clinical reasoning for the pharmacy preceptor, American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy , Volume 76, Issue 13, 1 July 2019, Pages 944–951, https://doi.org/10.1093/ajhp/zxz083

◼Required Competency Areas, Goals, and Objectives for Postgraduate Year One (PGY1) Pharmacy Residencies. (2015, March 8). Retrieved January 7, 2019, from https://www.ashp.org/-/media/assets/professional-development/residencies/docs/required-competency-areas-goals-objectives

◼Kristin W. Weitzel, Erika A. Walters, James Taylor, Teaching clinical problem solving: A preceptor’s guide, American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy , Volume 69, Issue 18, 15 September 2012, Pages 1588–1599, https://doi.org/10.2146/ajhp110521

◼Melissa S. Medina, Providing feedback to enhance pharmacy students’ performance, American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy , Volume 64, Issue 24, 15 December 2007, Pages 2542–2545, https://doi.org/10.2146/ajhp070316

◼Melissa S. Medina, Assessing student performance during experiential rotations, American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy , Volume 65, Issue 16, 15 August 2008, Pages 1502–1506, https://doi.org/10.2146/ajhp080007

REFERENCES