%0 Journal Article %T Accuracy of Inpatient Recall of Interaction With a Pharmacist: A Validation Study From 2 Acute Care Teaching Hospitals %A Kyle Kemp %A Lauren Bresee %A Sheena Neilson %A Sheri Koshman %A Taciana Pereira %A Vaninder K Sidhu %J Journal of Patient Experience %@ 2374-3743 %D 2019 %R 10.1177/2374373518771774 %X Research has shown that inpatients may not accurately report interacting with a pharmacist. To determine accuracy of patients¡¯ recollection of meeting with a pharmacist at 2 acute care teaching hospitals in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Retrospective review of 391 surveyed patients discharged from April 2013 to March 2014. Responses to meeting a pharmacist (yes/no) were compared with 2 reference standards: pharmacist documentation in patient charts and pharmacist clinical workload data. Sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive, and negative predictive values were calculated. One hundred ninety-five (49.9%) respondents reported meeting with a pharmacist. Of these, 71 (36.4%) had corresponding pharmacist chart documentation. Of the 196 respondents who reported not speaking with a pharmacist, 73 (37.2%) had documentation present. Compared with patient charts, sensitivity and specificity were 49.3% and 49.8%, respectively. Positive and negative predictive values were 36.4% and 62.8%, respectively. Similar results were seen in comparison with the workload data. Patients often inaccurately reported meeting with a pharmacist in the acute care setting. The results are useful for pharmacist training, patient education, and for refinement of the current survey question %K inpatient survey %K patient recall %K pharmacist %K interaction %K communication %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/2374373518771774