Evolution and Validation 0f Practice Standards, Training, and Professional Development
Pharmacy Services [a joint effort of SCCM, ACCP, and ASHP])
The task force provided 82 recommendation statements across five distinct domains (see Table 1 for
details):
Patient Care (n=34)
Quality Improvement (n=21)
Research/Scholarship (n=9)
| d. | Training/Education (n=10) |
|---|
Professional Development (n=8)
Essential: These are practice recommendations that are considered vital to the provision of pharmacy
care to ICU patients.
Desirable: Offers recommendations that are more specialized and specific to the ICU beyond the
essential recommendations
Essential versus desirable recommendation statements are further categorized based on the level of
ICU care being provided (see section V.D.1 in the text that follows for descriptions of level I, II, and
III ICUs)
and techniques vary depending on intended audience and content. The clinical pharmacist must develop
comfort and expertise with a wide range of teaching styles and techniques to be successful as an educator in
the ICU setting.
Pharmacy students and residents: Content has to be at a level appropriate to learners who may or may
not have a primary interest in critical care. Active learning strategies must be incorporated with didactic
approaches that are more traditional. For this audience, the clinical pharmacist has primary responsibility
for assessment/grading.
Clinical practice training
Role modeling (I do, you watch)
ii.
Coaching (I do, you help โฆ then โฆ you do, I help)
iii.
Mentoring (You do, I watch)
iv.
Facilitating (you do, I monitor)
Case-based teaching (point-of-care teaching)
Hands-on demonstrations of equipment, technology, and devices used in the ICU
| d. | Clinical conferences/topic discussions |
|---|
Assigned readings
Journal club
Quality improvement projects
Writing assignments
Case reports
ii.
Guideline/protocol development
iii.
Pharmacy and therapeutics (P&T) monographs
Drug information response
Medication use evaluations