Kathryn Mercer1, Elena Neiterman2, Lisa Guirguis3, Catherine Burns4, Kelly Grindrod5. 1. School of Pharmacy, University of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada. 2. School of Public Health and Health Systems, University of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada. 3. Faculty of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Alberta, Alberta, Canada. 4. Systems Design Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, University of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada. 5. School of Pharmacy, University of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada. Electronic address: kgrindrod@uwaterloo.ca.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pharmacists and physicians are being increasingly encouraged to adopt a collaborative approach to patient care, and delivery of health services. Strong collaboration between pharmacists and physicians is known to improve patient safety, however pharmacists have expressed difficulty in developing interprofessional working relationships. There is not a significant body of knowledge around how relationships influence how and when pharmacists and physicians communicate about patient care. OBJECTIVES: This paper examines how pharmacists and primary care physicians communicate with each other, specifically when they have or do not have an established relationship. METHODS: Thematic analysis of data from semi-structured interviews with nine primary care physicians and 25 pharmacists, we examined how pharmacists and physicians talk about their roles and responsibilities in primary care and how they build relationships with each other. RESULTS: We found that both groups of professionals communicated with each other in relation to the perceived scope of their practice and roles. Three emerging themes emerged in the data focusing on (1) the different ways physicians communicate with pharmacists; (2) insights into barriers discussed by pharmacists; and (3) how relationships shape collaboration and interactions. Pharmacists were also responsible for initiating the relationship as they relied on it more than the physicians. The presence or absence of a personal connection dramatically impacts how comfortable healthcare professionals are with collaboration around care. CONCLUSION: The findings support and extend the existing literature on pharmacist-physician collaboration, as it relates to trust, relationship, and role. The importance of strong communication is noted, as is the necessity of improving ways to build relationships to ensure strong interprofessional collaboration.
BACKGROUND: Pharmacists and physicians are being increasingly encouraged to adopt a collaborative approach to patient care, and delivery of health services. Strong collaboration between pharmacists and physicians is known to improve patient safety, however pharmacists have expressed difficulty in developing interprofessional working relationships. There is not a significant body of knowledge around how relationships influence how and when pharmacists and physicians communicate about patient care. OBJECTIVES: This paper examines how pharmacists and primary care physicians communicate with each other, specifically when they have or do not have an established relationship. METHODS: Thematic analysis of data from semi-structured interviews with nine primary care physicians and 25 pharmacists, we examined how pharmacists and physicians talk about their roles and responsibilities in primary care and how they build relationships with each other. RESULTS: We found that both groups of professionals communicated with each other in relation to the perceived scope of their practice and roles. Three emerging themes emerged in the data focusing on (1) the different ways physicians communicate with pharmacists; (2) insights into barriers discussed by pharmacists; and (3) how relationships shape collaboration and interactions. Pharmacists were also responsible for initiating the relationship as they relied on it more than the physicians. The presence or absence of a personal connection dramatically impacts how comfortable healthcare professionals are with collaboration around care. CONCLUSION: The findings support and extend the existing literature on pharmacist-physician collaboration, as it relates to trust, relationship, and role. The importance of strong communication is noted, as is the necessity of improving ways to build relationships to ensure strong interprofessional collaboration.
Authors: Colin Whaley; Ashley Bancsi; Joanne Man-Wai Ho; Catherine M Burns; Kelly Grindrod Journal: BMC Health Serv Res Date: 2021-01-26 Impact factor: 2.655
Authors: Amber Damiaens; Jessica Fraeyman; Sarah Fakroune; Caroline Hutsebaut; Sandrine Roussel; Lieve Van Dyck; Guido Van Hal; Stephan Van den Broucke; Veerle Foulon Journal: Int J Integr Care Date: 2021-04-23 Impact factor: 5.120