National assessment of pharmaceutical workforce and education using the International Pharmaceutical Federation’s global development goals: a case study of Qatar

Abstract Background The sustainable development goals were launched by the United Nations in 2015. Its fifth goal was describing the achievement of universal health coverage by 2030. This goal reaffirms the importance of investing in the development and training of the global health workforce. In al...

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Main Authors: Banan Abdulrzaq Mukhalalati, Meram Mohamed Mahmoud Elsayed Ibrahim, Majdoleen Omar Al Alawneh, Ahmed Awaisu, Ian Bates, Lina Bader
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-02-01
Series:Journal of Pharmaceutical Policy and Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40545-021-00305-y
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spelling doaj-1ae280b8aa7141ddaa1108bea12ed0d92021-02-23T09:14:16ZengBMCJournal of Pharmaceutical Policy and Practice2052-32112021-02-0114111810.1186/s40545-021-00305-yNational assessment of pharmaceutical workforce and education using the International Pharmaceutical Federation’s global development goals: a case study of QatarBanan Abdulrzaq Mukhalalati0Meram Mohamed Mahmoud Elsayed Ibrahim1Majdoleen Omar Al Alawneh2Ahmed Awaisu3Ian Bates4Lina Bader5Clinical Pharmacy and Practice Section, College of Pharmacy, QU Health, Qatar UniversityCollege of Pharmacy, Qatar UniversityCollege of Pharmacy, QU Health, Qatar UniversityCollege of Pharmacy, QU Health, Qatar UniversityUCL School of Pharmacy, Director of Education Development in FIP, UCLFIP Lead for Workforce Transformation and Development, International Pharmaceutical FederationAbstract Background The sustainable development goals were launched by the United Nations in 2015. Its fifth goal was describing the achievement of universal health coverage by 2030. This goal reaffirms the importance of investing in the development and training of the global health workforce. In alliance with this, the International Pharmaceutical Federation (FIP) has published reports about pharmacy workforce planning in several countries. However, data about Qatar were not included in these reports. In 2017, FIP developed a transformational roadmap of pharmaceutical workforce and education. One systematic framework component of the roadmap is the Pharmaceutical Workforce Development Goals (DG[w]s) that were released in late 2016 and subsequently incorporated into the more comprehensive Global Development Goals1 in 2020, encompassing not only workforce development, but additionally practice and pharmaceutical science development. This study aimed to evaluate the current situation of pharmacy workforce and education in Qatar in relation to the original 13 Pharmaceutical Workforce Development Goals (DG[w]s). The objective was to identify the gaps in pharmacy workforce and education and to recommend evidence-led strategies to be included in both the Ministry of Public Health and the Qatar University College of Pharmacy workforce development plans. Methods Three rounds of conventional Delphi technique were conducted with expert panels of key decision-makers in pharmacy practice from the College of Pharmacy at Qatar University and the Ministry of Public Health, utilizing the FIP’s self-assessment survey. Qualitative content analysis was used to analyze and prioritize the identified gaps from the collected data. DG[w] was considered “met” if all the provided indicators were achieved, “partially met” if at least one of the indicators were achieved, and “not met” if none of the indicators were achieved Results The lack of competency framework (DG[w]5), workforce data (DG[w]12), and workforce policy formation (DG[w]13) are three major gaps in the provision of pharmaceutical workforce and pharmacy education in Qatar, influencing other DG[w]s. These gaps need to be addressed by the formation of Qatar Pharmaceutical Association through which academic, practice, and policymaking sectors can work together in developing health workforce intelligence system. Conclusion The results indicated that DG[w]s are interrelated and a gap in one goal can negatively influence others. Results and recommendations of this research will facilitate the implementation of strategic plans across leading pharmacy sectors to meet health needs in Qatar and achieve the third pillar of the Qatar National Vision 2030.https://doi.org/10.1186/s40545-021-00305-yInternational Pharmaceutical FederationPharmaceutical Workforce Development GoalsWorkforce developmentDelphiPharmaceutical workforce and educationPharmacy education and practice
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Banan Abdulrzaq Mukhalalati
Meram Mohamed Mahmoud Elsayed Ibrahim
Majdoleen Omar Al Alawneh
Ahmed Awaisu
Ian Bates
Lina Bader
spellingShingle Banan Abdulrzaq Mukhalalati
Meram Mohamed Mahmoud Elsayed Ibrahim
Majdoleen Omar Al Alawneh
Ahmed Awaisu
Ian Bates
Lina Bader
National assessment of pharmaceutical workforce and education using the International Pharmaceutical Federation’s global development goals: a case study of Qatar
Journal of Pharmaceutical Policy and Practice
International Pharmaceutical Federation
Pharmaceutical Workforce Development Goals
Workforce development
Delphi
Pharmaceutical workforce and education
Pharmacy education and practice
author_facet Banan Abdulrzaq Mukhalalati
Meram Mohamed Mahmoud Elsayed Ibrahim
Majdoleen Omar Al Alawneh
Ahmed Awaisu
Ian Bates
Lina Bader
author_sort Banan Abdulrzaq Mukhalalati
title National assessment of pharmaceutical workforce and education using the International Pharmaceutical Federation’s global development goals: a case study of Qatar
title_short National assessment of pharmaceutical workforce and education using the International Pharmaceutical Federation’s global development goals: a case study of Qatar
title_full National assessment of pharmaceutical workforce and education using the International Pharmaceutical Federation’s global development goals: a case study of Qatar
title_fullStr National assessment of pharmaceutical workforce and education using the International Pharmaceutical Federation’s global development goals: a case study of Qatar
title_full_unstemmed National assessment of pharmaceutical workforce and education using the International Pharmaceutical Federation’s global development goals: a case study of Qatar
title_sort national assessment of pharmaceutical workforce and education using the international pharmaceutical federation’s global development goals: a case study of qatar
publisher BMC
series Journal of Pharmaceutical Policy and Practice
issn 2052-3211
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Abstract Background The sustainable development goals were launched by the United Nations in 2015. Its fifth goal was describing the achievement of universal health coverage by 2030. This goal reaffirms the importance of investing in the development and training of the global health workforce. In alliance with this, the International Pharmaceutical Federation (FIP) has published reports about pharmacy workforce planning in several countries. However, data about Qatar were not included in these reports. In 2017, FIP developed a transformational roadmap of pharmaceutical workforce and education. One systematic framework component of the roadmap is the Pharmaceutical Workforce Development Goals (DG[w]s) that were released in late 2016 and subsequently incorporated into the more comprehensive Global Development Goals1 in 2020, encompassing not only workforce development, but additionally practice and pharmaceutical science development. This study aimed to evaluate the current situation of pharmacy workforce and education in Qatar in relation to the original 13 Pharmaceutical Workforce Development Goals (DG[w]s). The objective was to identify the gaps in pharmacy workforce and education and to recommend evidence-led strategies to be included in both the Ministry of Public Health and the Qatar University College of Pharmacy workforce development plans. Methods Three rounds of conventional Delphi technique were conducted with expert panels of key decision-makers in pharmacy practice from the College of Pharmacy at Qatar University and the Ministry of Public Health, utilizing the FIP’s self-assessment survey. Qualitative content analysis was used to analyze and prioritize the identified gaps from the collected data. DG[w] was considered “met” if all the provided indicators were achieved, “partially met” if at least one of the indicators were achieved, and “not met” if none of the indicators were achieved Results The lack of competency framework (DG[w]5), workforce data (DG[w]12), and workforce policy formation (DG[w]13) are three major gaps in the provision of pharmaceutical workforce and pharmacy education in Qatar, influencing other DG[w]s. These gaps need to be addressed by the formation of Qatar Pharmaceutical Association through which academic, practice, and policymaking sectors can work together in developing health workforce intelligence system. Conclusion The results indicated that DG[w]s are interrelated and a gap in one goal can negatively influence others. Results and recommendations of this research will facilitate the implementation of strategic plans across leading pharmacy sectors to meet health needs in Qatar and achieve the third pillar of the Qatar National Vision 2030.
topic International Pharmaceutical Federation
Pharmaceutical Workforce Development Goals
Workforce development
Delphi
Pharmaceutical workforce and education
Pharmacy education and practice
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s40545-021-00305-y
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