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Evaluation of Pharmacists’ Preferences and Barriers to Access Continuing Education: A Cross-Sectional Study in Lebanon

Georges Hatem, Lina Ismaiil, Sanaa Awada, Diana Ghanem, Roula Bou Assi, Mathijs Goossens

2022Evaluation & the Health Professions15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The implementation of continuing education programs for pharmacists in Lebanon is emerging and needs to be further developed and strengthened to fill the gaps between knowledge acquisition and its application in the workplace. This study examined the perceptions of pharmacist preferences for and barriers to access programs. A crosssectional descriptive study was undertaken with a convenience sample of 142 pharmacists who were surveyed in their workplace. Almost 83.1% of pharmacists reported their day-to-day workplace experiences were the best way to learn. The high cost (50%) and time away from work (37.8%) were the main barriers to continuing education. Pharmacists reported a mean satisfaction of 5.8 (sd = 2.2)/10 with programs suggesting a need for routine needs assessments and adaptation of programs to better meet their learning needs.

Topics & Concepts

PharmacistContinuing educationCross-sectional studyAdaptation (eye)Medical educationNursingPerceptionNeeds assessmentMedicineDescriptive statisticsPharmacyWork experienceWork (physics)Family medicinePsychologyPolitical scienceNeuroscienceStatisticsLawPathologyEngineeringMechanical engineeringMathematicsPharmaceutical Practices and Patient OutcomesInnovations in Medical EducationPatient Safety and Medication Errors
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