Abstract

Background: Knowing the type of pharmacy used by the patient is meaningful to the pharmacist. Previous studies have assessed different factors predicting the kind of pharmacy selection and reached inconsistent findings. Objectives: To identify patient and health-related factors associated with pharmacy type selection. Methods: The Andersen Behavioral Model of Health Service Use was used to organize the selection of patient characteristics and categorize them as predisposing, enabling, and need factors. The dependent variable was the type of pharmacy used. Logistic regression was used to predict the association between patient-related characteristics and the type of pharmacy used. Results: Older age respondents were less likely to use independent pharmacies (OR = 0.992) and more likely to use mail pharmacy services (OR = 1.026). Highly educated people showed higher use of chain and mail pharmacies (OR = 1.272, 1.185, respectively) and less tendency to use the independent, supermarket, and prescription-only pharmacy types. Men were less likely to use chain pharmacies (OR = 0.932) and more likely to use supermarket pharmacies than women. Patients who use Medication Therapy Management (MTM) services had higher odds of using independent and supermarket pharmacies (OR = 2.808, 1.689, respectively). Patients with a higher number of chronic diseases and experienced side effects of medications were more likely to use independent pharmacies (OR for number of disease = 1.097 and for side effects = 1.095). Conclusions: This study’s findings identify characteristics associated with selecting certain pharmacy settings and direct future research to include other predictors encompassing beliefs, attitudes, and other social factors.

Highlights

  • The analyses showed that need factors have several significant relationships with the type of pharmacy used by respondents

  • All three subscales of the Anderson model showed a significant prediction of the type of pharmacy chosen by the consumers

  • Predisposing factor analysis revealed that race and education were the strongest predictors of the pharmacy type selection

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Summary

Introduction

Knowing the type of pharmacy used by the patient is important to the pharmacist. Previous studies found that a pharmacy’s location and convenience to the patient’s residence and work, in addition to medical providers’ location, were the most critical factors affecting pharmacy type selection [1,2,3,4,5,6]. The importance of factors affecting the selection of pharmacy is still under debate among researchers and experts. The influence of these factors is a debatable subject and needs more research [7,8]. Patient preferences in selecting a pharmacy type are more similar to preferences when selecting grocery stores than choosing non-pharmacist medical providers [9]. Many factors affect the choice of the kind of pharmacy, including the following: experienced pharmacists, convenience, branded pharmacies, and demographic variables [10,11,12,13,14]

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