Research self-efficacy in early-career pharmacists: Tool validation and correlation with personal attributes
Aline Hajj, Hala Sacre, Chadia Haddad, Jenny Elia, Joya El Ghawi, Lina Haidar, Lama Dimachkieh, Mahmoud Nasrallah, Jihan Safwan, Deema Rahme, Sukaina Basma, Salameh Pascale

TL;DR
This study validates a tool to measure research self-efficacy in early-career pharmacists and finds it correlates with personal traits like leadership and strategic thinking.
Contribution
The study confirms the validity and reliability of the Research Self-Efficacy Scale (RSES) for early-career pharmacists in Lebanon.
Findings
The RSES scale was found to be valid and reliable for assessing research self-efficacy.
Pharmacists from foreign universities scored higher on RSES than those from Lebanese institutions.
Self-efficacy correlated positively with generalized self-efficacy and strategic thinking.
Abstract
Self-efficacy in research and personal characteristics of pharmacists are necessary to lead and implement pharmaceutical research strategies. This study primarily aimed to confirm the validity of the Research Self-Efficacy Scale (RSES) among early-career pharmacists; a secondary objective was to assess participants' perspectives on research self-efficacy while considering personal characteristics, such as strategic thinking and leadership. Using an exploratory factor analysis and internal consistency measure, the RSES scale validity and reliability were assessed among Lebanese early-career pharmacists. Its association with personal attributes, such as global self-efficacy, leadership, and strategic thinking, was also assessed through correlation with validated measures. The RSES scale was found to be valid and reliable. Pharmacists from foreign universities scored higher on the RSES…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth Sciences Research and Education · Health Policy Implementation Science · Health and Medical Research Impacts
