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Opioid Use Disorder Curricular Content in US-Based Doctor of Pharmacy Programs

Molly A. Nichols, Elizabeth G. Riley, Alexander S. Chao, Carmina G. Sales, Monica L. Miller, Geoffrey M. Curran, Carol A. Ott, Margie E. Snyder, Karen Suchanek Hudmon

2023American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To characterize the instructional settings, delivery methods, and assessment methods of opioid use disorder (OUD) content in Doctor of Pharmacy (PharmD) programs; assess faculty perceptions of OUD content; and assess faculty perceptions of a shared OUD curriculum. METHODS: This national, cross-sectional, descriptive survey study was designed to characterize OUD content, faculty perceptions, and faculty and institutional demographics. A contact list was developed for accredited, US-based PharmD programs with publicly-accessible online faculty directories (n = 137). Recruitment and telephone survey administration occurred between August and December 2021. Descriptive statistics were computed for all items. Open-ended items were reviewed to identify common themes. RESULTS: A faculty member from 67 (48.9%) of 137 institutions contacted completed the survey. All programs incorporated OUD content into required coursework. Didactic lectures were the most common delivery method (98.5%). Programs delivered a median of 7.0 h (range, 1.5-33.0) of OUD content in required coursework, with 85.1% achieving the 4-hour minimum for substance use disorder-related content recommended by the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy. Just over half (56.8%) of faculty agreed or strongly agreed that their students were adequately prepared to provide opioid interventions; however, 50.0% or fewer perceived topics such as prescription interventions, screening and assessment interventions, resource referral interventions, and stigma to be covered adequately. Almost all (97.0%) indicated moderate, high, or extremely high interest in a shared OUD curriculum. CONCLUSION: Enhanced OUD education is needed in PharmD programs. A shared OUD curriculum was of interest to faculty and should be explored as a potentially viable solution for addressing this need.

Topics & Concepts

Opioid use disorderPsychological interventionCourseworkCurriculumPharmacyFamily medicineMedicineMedical educationLicensureAccreditationDescriptive statisticsPsychologyNursingOpioidPedagogyMathematicsStatisticsInternal medicineReceptorOpioid Use Disorder TreatmentSubstance Abuse Treatment and OutcomesHealthcare professionals’ stress and burnout
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