BackgroundInterprofessional clinical training is increasingly recognized as essential for preparing pharmacy graduates to address both individual patient needs and broader population-health priorities. Yet how Doctor of Pharmacy (PharmD) students actually develop population-health competencies within clinical environments remains poorly understood.MethodsThis qualitative research explored the learning frame with driving and restraining forces that shape population-health competence among final-y
Exploring how interprofessional forces shape population-health competencies for clinical pharmacy trainees
Seeba Zachariah
