Title: Human Resource Planning for the Pharmaceutical Sector
1Human Resource Planning for the Pharmaceutical
Sector
- Richard Laing (BUSPH)
- Brenda Waning (MCP)
2Session Overview
- What is HR Planning?
- The numbers game
- Balance between pharmacists and pharmacist
technicians - Curricula issues
3What is HR Planning?
- Involves three key key components
Numbers
Training
Personnel Management
4Pharmacy service gap - nearly a 100-fold
variation in pharmacists per 100,000 population
Europe, N. America (15 to 94 per 100,000)
Asia (1 to 7 per 100,000)
Pharmacists per 100,000 population
Africa (0.1 to 3 per 100,000)
Source WHO/HST/GSP/94.1 (1994)
5The Numbers Game - Estimating Future Needs
Population to be served
Health demands
Health Needs
Future Population
Future Facilities
FutureActivities
HR ActivityRatio
HR Population Ratios
HR Facility Ratio
6Human Resources - Projections Steps
- 1. Select staff to be projected
- 2. Identify variables eg training output,
retirements, deaths, resignations, migration,
dismissals - 3. Estimate formulas to calculate variables e.g.
retirements (2.5 per year) - 4. Define assumptions
- 5. Calculate projections using stock and flow
methods
7Human Resources Supply Model
- -New trainees
- -People returning
- to work
- -People transferring
- from jobs elsewhere
- -People coming from
- other sectors
Gains
-Deaths -Normal Retirements -Transfers in Health
sector -Transfer out of health sectors -Emigration
-Temporary Losses
Current Stock of a Category
Losses
8Indonesian Projections
9How can supply be increased?
- Reduce Losses!!!
- Increase supply (but can be slow)
- Increase returns (incentives and motivators)
10Balance between pharmacists and pharmacy
technicians
- A well trained (3 years) pharmacy technician can
perform many of the functions that a pharmacist
can and the salary of a pharmacy technician is
usually 40-50 of a pharmacist - One pharmacist can supervise 3-5 pharm techs
- What is the ideal balance or ratio?
- What about training numbers?
11Ratios of Pharmacists to Pharmacy Assistants
Indonesia
12Curricula Issues
- Are pharmacy and medical graduates in your
country prepared to work as pharmacists and
physicians upon graduation?
13Curricula Issues
- Changing roles for pharmacists
- Coursework does NOT prepare pharmacist to work
- in TODAYs world
- Professors unwilling to change
- Difficult transition for graduates
- Student today, mentor and pharmacist tomorrow
- Teaching methods are suboptimal
- Colleges unwilling to train pharmacy technicians
14Changing Roles for Pharmacists
- Traditional Roles for Pharmacists
- Community Pharmacist
- mixing and grinding
- Hospital Pharmacist
- Industry
15Evolution of Pharmacists Roles
- Management
- Pharmaceutical Care
- Information, Education, Communication
- Quality Assurance
- RD pharmaceutical production
- Regulation and Ethics
- Marketing
- Education and Training of Pharmacists
- Public Health
16Required Skills Are Linked with Changing Roles
- Two kinds of skills
- general skills needed by all pharmacists
- specific skills needed in certain areas
- These skills are not being addressed in curricula
- Some skills are learned on the job
17Pharmacists Roles and SkillsPractice Area
Education Training
- Role Curriculm Development
- Skills Needed
- Negotiation
- Communication
- Academic Practice Policies
- Curriculum Devt.
- Aims Objectives Writing
- Problem-Based Learning
18Management Roles Skills
- Role Management Information Systems
- Skills Needed
- Information storage, retrieval, and utilization
- Contract Development
- Procurement Quantification skills
- Inventory
- Distribution
- Role Human Resources
- Skills needed
- HR Management Skills
- Hiring, Firing, Contract Development, Salary
Surveys Adjustments - Leadership skills
- Communication skills
19Why are skills not included in curricula?
- Lack of written goals and objectives for
curricula - Lack of curricula evaluation and revision
- Teachers are not practitioners
- Teachers have not kept up to date
20How Can We Better Prepare Students?
- Curriculum Evaluation Revision
- make small changes first
- start with one class
- choose friendly professor
- complete overhaul is very difficult
- conversion to all PharmD made this possible in US
- Include pharmacists and physicians in teaching
and curriculum evaluation - Dont wait for an invitation!
21Curricula Evaluation Revision
- COURSE MAPPING
- Determine what skills are needed today and
project skills needed in near future - Use skills to compile a list of goals and
objectives - Determine which courses (existing or new) can
meet your goals and objectives and provide
necessary skills - Include practitioners in process
22Do all Students Need to Learn about Everything?
- 2 Options
- Prepare all students with general skills
- Offer tracks of specialization
- Management
- Research
- Pharmaceutical Care
- Industry
23Teaching Methods
- How many key points can a student recall from a
lecture?
24Improving Teaching Methods
- Problem-based learning
- Emphasis on case-based instruction
- Can include many skills in one case
- Small group workshops and presentations
- Goal of creating active learners and replicating
real life scenarios
25Teaching Students to Communicate
- Who do pharmacists communicate with?
- Teaching Communication Skills
- Courses Interpersonal Communication
- Labs Professional Pharmacy Practice
- Exams Oral Proficiency Exam (ESL)
- Combining pharmacy students with medical students
in class - pharmacology
26Example of Course EvolutionProfessional
Pharmacy Practice
- Past Dispensing, monitoring, counseling
- Now Disease State Management with lab
- Peak-Flow meters
- Blood glucometers
- Vital Signs
- Monitoring, Intervening, Education
27Conclusion
- Large gap between academia and practice
- Bridge Gap by
- Continuous curricula evaluation revision
- identify needed skills and map skills to courses
- Incorporation of practitioners into teaching
curriculum evaluation - Improvement of teaching methods
- PBL
28Exercise refer to pages 13-15
- Complete Columns B, D, E, and F