Purpose and methods: Data from 358 pharmacist-patient encounters in 12 community pharmacies were used to investigate the association of prescription status, patient age, patient gender, and patient question asking with the content of pharmacist-patient communication.
Results: There was an association between prescription status and the provision of five types of information, patient age and gender were associated with the provision of the same two types of information, and patient question asking was associated with the provision of eight types of information.
Conclusions: An important cue for improvement of pharmacist-patient communication was patient question asking. Thus, it is imperative to find ways to increase question asking by patients and understand why some patients are reluctant to ask their pharmacist questions.