ObjectiveTo identify barriers to completing and publishing pharmacy residency research
projects from the perspective of program directors and former residents.MethodsThis was a cross-sectional survey of pharmacy residency program directors and
former post-graduate year one and two residents. Directors of pharmacy
residency programs whose residents present their projects at the Western
States Conference (n=216) were invited to complete an online survey and
asked to forward the survey to former residents of their program in 2009,
2010, or 2011. The survey focused on four broad areas: 1) demographic
characteristics of the residency programs, directors, and residents; 2)
perceived value of the research project; 3) perceived barriers with various
stages of research; and 4) self-identified barriers to successful research
project completion and publication.ResultsA total of 32 program directors and 98 residents completed the survey. The
minority of programs offered formal residency research training. Both groups
reported value in the research project as part of residency training.
Significantly more directors reported obtaining institutional review board
approval and working through the publication process as barriers to the
research project (46.7% vs. 22.6% and 73.3% vs. 43.0%, respectively
p<0.05) while residents were more likely to report collecting and
analyzing the data as barriers (34.4% vs. 13.3% and 39.8% vs. 20.0%,
respectively, p<0.05). Both groups self-identified time constraints and
limitations in study design or quality of the study as barriers. However,
while program directors also indicated lack of resident motivation (65.5%),
residents reported lack of mentorship or program structural issues
(43.3%).ConclusionsOverall, while both groups found value in the residency research projects,
there were barriers identified by both groups. The results of this study may
provide areas of opportunity for improving the quality and publication rates
of resident research projects.
Weekly warfarin doses decreased in the immediate postoperative period in anticoagulated patients after bariatric surgery but returned to their preoperative doses after approximately 6 months. A similar pattern was not observed in patients in the control group who underwent other types of abdominal surgery. Compared with preoperative anticoagulation control, this resulted in reduced anticoagulation control despite close INR monitoring. If a causal relationship between bariatric surgery and warfarin sensitivity is established in future research, developing and validating a postbariatric surgery warfarin-dosing algorithm would be valuable.
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