Assessment of Communication Barriers in Community Pharmacies

Author:

Paluck Elan C.1,Green Lawrence W.2,Frankish C. James3,Fielding David W.4,Haverkamp Beth4

Affiliation:

1. Regina Qu’Appelle Health Region, Saskatchewan, Canada

2. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

3. Michael Smith Foundation for Health Promotion Research

4. University of British Columbia

Abstract

This study identified previously reported facilitators and barriers to pharmacist-client communication and then evaluated their impact on the observed communication behaviors of pharmacists. Pharmacists (n = 100) completed a seven-page questionnaire collecting information on 11 variables that had been organized according to the Policy, Regulatory and Organizational Constructs in Educational and Ecological Development (PROCEDE) model as predisposing, enabling, or reinforcing of pharmacist communication with their clients. Demographic variables also were included. “Communication quality” served as the study’s dependent variable, whereas pharmacist responses served as the independent variables. Communication quality scores for each pharmacist were obtained from the analysis of 765 audio recordings of verbal exchanges occurring between the study pharmacists and their consenting clients during 4-hour, on-site observation periods. Four of the variables examined in the study were found to share a unique relationship with communication quality (pharmacists’ attitude, year of graduation, adherence expectations, and outcome expectations). Hierarchical multiple regression analysis revealed that the variables measured in the questionnaire accounted for 23% of the variance in communication quality scores. Plausible explanations for why the study was unable to capture more of the variance in its proposed relationships and future areas for research are provided.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Policy

Reference61 articles.

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4. Berger, B. A. & Grimley, D. (1997). Pharmacists’readiness for rendering pharmaceutical care. Journal of the American Pharmaceutical Association, NS37, 535-542.

5. Brushwood, D. B. (1995). The pharmacist’s expanding legal responsibility for patient care. Journal of Social and Administrative Pharmacy, 12, 53-62.

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