Evaluation of curricula content based on Thai pharmacy competency standards

Objective. To evaluate the curricula content of Thai pharmacy schools based on the Thai pharmacy competency standards. Methods. Course syllabi were collected from 11 pharmacy schools. A questionnaire was developed based on the Thai pharmacy competency standards. Course coordinators completed the que...

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Main Authors: Nattiya Kapol, Pagamas Maitreemit, Petcharat Pongcharoensuk, Edward P. Armstrong
Other Authors: Silpakorn University
Format: Article
Published: 2018
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Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/19885
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spelling th-mahidol.198852018-07-12T09:53:56Z Evaluation of curricula content based on Thai pharmacy competency standards Nattiya Kapol Pagamas Maitreemit Petcharat Pongcharoensuk Edward P. Armstrong Silpakorn University Mahidol University University of Arizona Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics Social Sciences Objective. To evaluate the curricula content of Thai pharmacy schools based on the Thai pharmacy competency standards. Methods. Course syllabi were collected from 11 pharmacy schools. A questionnaire was developed based on the Thai pharmacy competency standards. Course coordinators completed the questionnaire assessing the curricula content. Results. The curricula for both the bachelor of science in pharmacy degree (BS Pharm) and doctor of pharmacy (PharmD) degree programs included the minimum content required by the 8 competency domains. The dominant content area in BS Pharm degree programs was product-oriented material. The content ratio of patient to product to social and administrative pharmacy in the BS Pharm degree programs was 2:3:1, respectively. However, the content ratio suggested by the Thai Pharmacy Council was 3:2:1, respectively. For the PharmD programs, the largest content area was patient-oriented material, which was in agreement with the framework suggested by the Thai Pharmacy Council. Conclusions. The curricula of all Thai pharmacy schools met the competency standards; however, some patient-oriented material should be expanded and some product-oriented content deleted in order to meet the recommended content ratio. 2018-07-12T02:52:02Z 2018-07-12T02:52:02Z 2008-01-01 Article American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education. Vol.72, No.1 (2008) 10.5688/aj720109 15536467 00029459 2-s2.0-39449110408 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/19885 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=39449110408&origin=inward
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
topic Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics
Social Sciences
spellingShingle Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics
Social Sciences
Nattiya Kapol
Pagamas Maitreemit
Petcharat Pongcharoensuk
Edward P. Armstrong
Evaluation of curricula content based on Thai pharmacy competency standards
description Objective. To evaluate the curricula content of Thai pharmacy schools based on the Thai pharmacy competency standards. Methods. Course syllabi were collected from 11 pharmacy schools. A questionnaire was developed based on the Thai pharmacy competency standards. Course coordinators completed the questionnaire assessing the curricula content. Results. The curricula for both the bachelor of science in pharmacy degree (BS Pharm) and doctor of pharmacy (PharmD) degree programs included the minimum content required by the 8 competency domains. The dominant content area in BS Pharm degree programs was product-oriented material. The content ratio of patient to product to social and administrative pharmacy in the BS Pharm degree programs was 2:3:1, respectively. However, the content ratio suggested by the Thai Pharmacy Council was 3:2:1, respectively. For the PharmD programs, the largest content area was patient-oriented material, which was in agreement with the framework suggested by the Thai Pharmacy Council. Conclusions. The curricula of all Thai pharmacy schools met the competency standards; however, some patient-oriented material should be expanded and some product-oriented content deleted in order to meet the recommended content ratio.
author2 Silpakorn University
author_facet Silpakorn University
Nattiya Kapol
Pagamas Maitreemit
Petcharat Pongcharoensuk
Edward P. Armstrong
format Article
author Nattiya Kapol
Pagamas Maitreemit
Petcharat Pongcharoensuk
Edward P. Armstrong
author_sort Nattiya Kapol
title Evaluation of curricula content based on Thai pharmacy competency standards
title_short Evaluation of curricula content based on Thai pharmacy competency standards
title_full Evaluation of curricula content based on Thai pharmacy competency standards
title_fullStr Evaluation of curricula content based on Thai pharmacy competency standards
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of curricula content based on Thai pharmacy competency standards
title_sort evaluation of curricula content based on thai pharmacy competency standards
publishDate 2018
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/19885
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