2016
DOI: 10.1111/jep.12677
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A qualitative assessment of West Virginia pharmacist activities and attitude in diabetes management

Abstract: Despite the mounting evidence that pharmacists can improve diabetic patient outcomes while significantly reducing overall costs, WV pharmacists are less involved in providing education or counseling in a variety of areas related to disease state management. In addition, identifying pharmacist challenges provides significant information for future planning toward improving diabetic patient care.

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Cited by 11 publications
(15 citation statements)
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References 37 publications
(60 reference statements)
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“…These results are in line with those of studies from Qatar, Canada, and the United States. 16,20,28,29 The majority of pharmacists admit that more attention should be paid to the seriousness of complications, to the community pharmacists' responsibility, and to the importance of screening pre-diabetes.…”
Section: Discussion Summarymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These results are in line with those of studies from Qatar, Canada, and the United States. 16,20,28,29 The majority of pharmacists admit that more attention should be paid to the seriousness of complications, to the community pharmacists' responsibility, and to the importance of screening pre-diabetes.…”
Section: Discussion Summarymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this sense, governing bodies, such as Center for the Advancement of Pharmacy Education (CAPE) or Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE) may plan or carry out larger studies or reviews to generate updated guidelines and regulations on teaching/learning strategies [14,23]. Besides monitoring and registering undergraduates’ progress, schools of pharmacy should keep track of the professional outcomes and/or knowledge of their graduate pharmacists [17,18].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The improvement of students’ ability to communicate with patients is classified as a learning outcome already included in many pharmacy curricula [16]. Another aspect is that many schools of pharmacy are trying to find ways not only to improve undergraduates’ professional development, but also to assess and keep track of this process during the pharmacy course, as well as throughout their professional career (i.e., after pharmacy graduation) [10,16,17,18].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Research on barriers to disease state management by pharmacists for people with diabetes have identified practice site environment barriers including time constraints and workload, lack of reimbursement, lack of support by the patient's physician, lack of pharmacy management support and lack of patient knowledge of the pharmacist's ability. 16 Participants in the Canadian Pharmacy Thought Leadership Summit felt more strongly about the impact that system and workplace-level barriers had on the advancement of the profession of pharmacy as compared with individual and education-level barriers, specifically poor understanding of the scopes of practice/services of pharmacy professionals in the health care system and too many competing priorities in the pharmacy workplace. 17 If these were the same barriers resulting in lack of follow-up in the MCD research, it does not explain why pharmacists were able to overcome these barriers to deliver more than 400,000 initial medication assessments but were unable to provide follow-up evaluations.…”
Section: There Are Many Barriers To Routine Monitoring and Follow-upmentioning
confidence: 99%