Abstract

Background: Trust in health care professionals is critical in the health care system and is needed for a patient to seek care, reveal sensitive information, and follow a specified treatment plan, among other things. Objective: To better understand trust in community pharmacists, this research develops a model of how patient awareness of the different community pharmacy roles (role awareness) and pharmacist familiarity influences pharmacist trust. Methods: A survey of pharmacy patients in Nova Scotia, Canada, occurred in November and December 2019, with quota sampling used to achieve representativeness by age, gender, and household income. A total of 640 usable surveys were obtained. Consistent partial least squares was deployed to test and refine the model. Results: Overall, the final model highlights that both role awareness and pharmacist familiarity influence patient assessments of pharmacist trust and explains 38.7% of its variance. Pharmacist familiarity has a stronger influence than role awareness on pharmacist trust. Results of the consistent partial least squares multigroup analysis found no statistically significant differences in the model based on patient gender. Conclusion: This research provides a means to capture interpersonal trust in community pharmacists and identifies 2 key determinants of such trust. This research also provides guidance on how to assess pharmacist trust, the value of patients knowing their pharmacist, and the value of patient awareness of the roles of the various professionals behind the counter. Such knowledge will help pharmacy managers, associations, and regulatory authorities develop evidence-informed plans to assess, rebuild, and sustain trust.

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