Teaching of clinical pharmacology and therapeutics in UK medical schools: current status in 2009

Article date: July 2010

By: Lelia O'Shaughnessy, Inam Haq, Simon Maxwell, Martin Llewelyn, in Volume 70, Issue 1, pages 143-148

WHAT IS ALREADY KNOWN ABOUT THIS SUBJECT

AIM

To describe the current structure, delivery and assessment of Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics (CPT) teaching in UK medical schools.

METHODS

An online questionnaire was distributed to the person with overall responsibility for CPT teaching at all UK medical schools in June 2009.

RESULTS

Thirty of the 32 UK medical schools responded. 60% of schools have a CPT course although in 72% this was an integrated vertical theme. At 70% of schools pharmacologists have overall responsibility for CPT teaching (clinical 67%, non‐clinical 33%); at 20% teaching is run by a non‐specialist clinician and at 7% by a pharmacist. Teaching is commonly delivered by NHS clinicians (87%) and clinical pharmacists (80%) using lectures (90%) but additionally 50% of schools use e‐Learning and 63% have a student formulary. CPT is assessed throughout the curriculum at many schools through written, practical examinations and course work. 90% of schools have specific CPT content in their written examinations. 90% of respondents believed that their students were ‘fairly’ to ‘well’ prepared for the foundation year but only 37% of schools gather data on the competence of their graduates.

CONCLUSIONS

CPT teaching in UK medical schools is very diverse. Most schools do not assess the performance of their graduates as prescribers and there is a lack of evidence that many of the teaching approaches employed are suitable for the development of prescribing skills. It is vital that developments in CPT teaching are driven by validated, real‐world assessments of the prescribing skills of medical students and newly qualified doctors.

DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2125.2010.03665.x

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