Pharmacy (Aug 2013)

Addressing Cultural Competency in Pharmacy Education through International Service Learning and Community Engagement

  • Rosemin Kassam,
  • Augusto Estrada,
  • Yvonne Huang,
  • Birpaul Bhander,
  • John B. Collins

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy1010016
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 1
pp. 16 – 33

Abstract

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This paper describes the design, implementation and evaluation of a course in international service learning and community engagement for pharmacy undergraduate students. The course offered students opportunities to cultivate cultural competency in an international setting foreign to their own—Sub-Saharan Africa. The experience consisted of pre-departure preparation seminars followed by subsequent community immersion to experience, explore and confront personal attitudes and perceptions. A key feature of this course was its emphasis on a continuing cycle of learning, community engagement and reflection. Three students participated, a near-maximum cohort. Their daily self-reflections were qualitatively analyzed to document the impact of their cultural learning and experiences and revealed meaningful learning in the domains of self-assessment and awareness of their personal and professional culture, exposure to a participatory health delivery model involving the patient, the community and a multidisciplinary team and opportunities to engage in patient care in a different cultural setting. This proof-of-concept course provided students with experiences that were life-changing on both personal and professional levels and confirmed the viability and relevance of international service learning for the pharmacy field within its university-wide mandate.

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