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Pharmacist attire and its impact on patient preference

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TLDR
With the exception of approachability, patients indicated preference for pharmacist with the white coat regardless of community setting, and patient-pharmacist communication may not occur regardless of perceived knowledge and competency.
Abstract
Objective: To determine the influence of demographics on patient preferences for community pharmacist attire. Methods: A 10-item questionnaire was developed and administered to patients visiting a chain pharmacy or an independent pharmacy in the Birmingham, Alabama metropolitan area. Mann– Whitney was used to examine if statistical differences existed in chain versus independent pharmacy patient’s selections based on pharmacist attire. Results: A statistically significant difference in patient preference for pharmacist attire between the settings in regards to which pharmacist patients felt was more approachable was observed; 51.2% of chain pharmacy respondents compared to 30% of independent pharmacy respondents identified the pharmacist pair with business formal attire and white coat as more approachable. Differences in education was also apparent with 70% of respondents in the independent pharmacy setting reporting having a Bachelor’s degree or higher compared to 45% of respondents in the chain pharmacy setting. Conclusion: With the exception of approachability, patients indicated preference for pharmacist with the white coat regardless of community setting. Given the importance of patient-pharmacist communication for building successful patientpharmacist relationships, if patients do not perceive the pharmacists as approachable, communication and subsequent development of said relationships may not occur regardless of perceived knowledge and competency.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Pharmacist and child communication: A phenomenological multidisciplinary study from the perspectives of undergraduate students in pharmacy and child development

TL;DR: In this paper , an interdisciplinary study about pharmacist-child communication exploring the perceptions and observations of students studying in two different but intersecting fields, which are pharmacy and child development, is presented.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

What to wear today? Effect of doctor's attire on the trust and confidence of patients.

TL;DR: Wearing professional dress (ie, a white coat with more formal attire) while providing patient care by physicians may favorably influence trust and confidence-building in the medical encounter.
Journal Article

Putting on the style: what patients think of the way their doctor dresses.

TL;DR: Overall, patients seemed to favour a more formal approach to dress, with the male doctor wearing a formal suit and tie and the female doctor in a white coat scoring the most high marks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Patients’ Satisfaction and Their Perception of the Pharmacist

TL;DR: Patients may be less able to judge the technical quality of the care they receive, but they do judge their social interaction with the pharmacist, and Pharmacy professionals must increase patients' awareness of the value of pharmaceutical care services and make it important to their judgment of satisfaction.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the value of an old dress code in the new millennium.

TL;DR: Whether, reference to gender aside, the old adage “clothes make the man” still contains a measure of truth, and whether the authors' patients actually feel comforted when they are approached by a medical person in formal rather than casual attire is explored.
Journal ArticleDOI

Patient perceptions of professionalism in dentistry.

TL;DR: Research found that all dental care providers displayed a professional appearance as well as behavior, and the attire of the dental care provider affected the comfort and anxiety levels of patients, as did first impressions of both students and faculty.
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