Communication skills – pharmacist interaction with patients and prescribers MCQs With Answer

Effective communication skills are essential for pharmacists to interact confidently with patients and prescribers. This resource helps B. Pharm students develop verbal and nonverbal communication, active listening, patient counseling, medication history taking, and interprofessional collaboration. You will learn techniques for clear prescription interpretation, conveying dosing instructions, handling difficult conversations, cultural sensitivity, and ensuring medication adherence and patient safety. Practical MCQs with answers focus on real-world scenarios, legal and ethical considerations, documentation, and evidence-based counseling strategies. Strengthening these competencies reduces medication errors and fosters trust within healthcare teams. Practice with these MCQs will prepare you for clinical roles and exams. Now let’s test your knowledge with 30 MCQs on this topic.

Q1. Which communication technique best ensures patient understanding during a medication counselling session?

  • Repeating the prescription text verbatim
  • Using complex medical terminology to sound authoritative
  • Applying the teach-back method and asking the patient to explain instructions
  • Speaking faster to cover more information

Correct Answer: Applying the teach-back method and asking the patient to explain instructions

Q2. When clarifying a prescriber’s ambiguous prescription, the most appropriate first step is:

  • Dispense the drug as written to avoid delay
  • Guess the intended dose based on experience
  • Contact the prescriber to verify details
  • Substitute a random drug from the same class

Correct Answer: Contact the prescriber to verify details

Q3. Which verbal skill demonstrates active listening in a patient encounter?

  • Interrupting to correct the patient’s description
  • Summarizing the patient’s concerns and asking clarifying questions
  • Changing the topic to general health advice
  • Repeating the same advice without acknowledging concerns

Correct Answer: Summarizing the patient’s concerns and asking clarifying questions

Q4. Nonverbal cues that can build rapport with patients include:

  • Avoiding eye contact to respect privacy
  • Crossing arms to appear authoritative
  • Maintaining open posture, appropriate eye contact, and nodding
  • Typing on the computer while the patient speaks

Correct Answer: Maintaining open posture, appropriate eye contact, and nodding

Q5. The SBAR technique is primarily used for:

  • Teaching patients how to self-administer injections
  • Structuring concise interprofessional communication about patient status
  • Documenting retail sales transactions
  • Measuring pharmacy workflow efficiency

Correct Answer: Structuring concise interprofessional communication about patient status

Q6. When a patient expresses fear about side effects, the pharmacist should first:

  • Dismiss the concern as trivial
  • Provide reassurance, explore the concern, and offer evidence-based information
  • Recommend stopping the medication immediately
  • Advise the patient to look up information online

Correct Answer: Provide reassurance, explore the concern, and offer evidence-based information

Q7. Which documentation practice is most appropriate after a counseling session?

  • Write only the date and patient name
  • Record key counselling points, patient understanding, and any actions taken
  • Keep verbal notes and discard them later
  • Document only if an adverse event occurs

Correct Answer: Record key counselling points, patient understanding, and any actions taken

Q8. Cultural competence in pharmacist-patient interaction includes:

  • Assuming all patients have the same beliefs
  • Ignoring cultural differences to treat everyone equally
  • Respecting cultural preferences, asking about beliefs, and tailoring counselling
  • Refusing to discuss cultural issues

Correct Answer: Respecting cultural preferences, asking about beliefs, and tailoring counselling

Q9. When informing a prescriber about a potential drug interaction, the pharmacist should:

  • Accuse the prescriber of negligence
  • Present clear evidence, suggested alternatives, and clinical implications
  • Delay communication until after dispensing
  • Change the prescription without informing the prescriber

Correct Answer: Present clear evidence, suggested alternatives, and clinical implications

Q10. Open-ended questions are useful because they:

  • Require yes/no answers and save time
  • Encourage detailed patient responses and uncover concerns
  • Allow the pharmacist to lead the conversation strictly
  • Avoid patient participation

Correct Answer: Encourage detailed patient responses and uncover concerns

Q11. Which approach is best for motivating a non-adherent patient?

  • Lecture the patient about noncompliance
  • Use motivational interviewing to explore ambivalence and set achievable goals
  • Threaten to stop providing services
  • Ignore the adherence issue

Correct Answer: Use motivational interviewing to explore ambivalence and set achievable goals

Q12. For telephone communication with prescribers, the pharmacist should:

  • Provide a long narrative without structure
  • Use SBAR or another concise format and confirm key points
  • Talk only when the prescriber requests it
  • Send informal text messages instead

Correct Answer: Use SBAR or another concise format and confirm key points

Q13. Confidentiality during patient counselling means:

  • Discussing sensitive issues loudly in public areas
  • Ensuring private space, limiting information to necessary parties, and obtaining consent for disclosure
  • Sharing patient details with family without consent
  • Posting counselling summaries on social media for education

Correct Answer: Ensuring private space, limiting information to necessary parties, and obtaining consent for disclosure

Q14. Active listening tools include:

  • Interrupting frequently to show engagement
  • Reflective statements, silence, summarizing, and paraphrasing
  • Focusing on computer entry rather than the patient
  • Asking only closed questions

Correct Answer: Reflective statements, silence, summarizing, and paraphrasing

Q15. When a prescriber requests a therapeutic substitution, the pharmacist should:

  • Substitute any cheaper drug from another class
  • Verify clinical appropriateness, inform the prescriber and patient, and document the change
  • Refuse any substitution on principle
  • Substitute without documentation

Correct Answer: Verify clinical appropriateness, inform the prescriber and patient, and document the change

Q16. Effective written communication of a drug-related recommendation should include:

  • Vague statements and no references
  • Concise background, specific recommendation, rationale, and supporting evidence
  • Only the drug name without context
  • Personal opinions without clinical data

Correct Answer: Concise background, specific recommendation, rationale, and supporting evidence

Q17. Which counseling point is essential for patients starting an anticoagulant?

  • No need to report bleeding unless severe
  • Explain signs of bleeding, interactions, monitoring plan, and when to seek help
  • Encourage doubling the dose if a dose is missed
  • Advise taking herbal supplements to improve efficacy

Correct Answer: Explain signs of bleeding, interactions, monitoring plan, and when to seek help

Q18. Handling a difficult prescriber who rejects recommendations requires:

  • Escalating immediately to hospital administration
  • Maintaining professional tone, providing evidence, and seeking compromise
  • Ignoring the prescriber and proceeding as you believe
  • Using emotional arguments to persuade

Correct Answer: Maintaining professional tone, providing evidence, and seeking compromise

Q19. When counseling elderly patients, pharmacists should:

  • Use loud, rapid speech to save time
  • Assess cognition, simplify regimens, check hearing/vision, and use written aids
  • Avoid discussing side effects to prevent worry
  • Give multiple instructions at once without reinforcement

Correct Answer: Assess cognition, simplify regimens, check hearing/vision, and use written aids

Q20. A pharmacist detecting a potential medication error should first:

  • Blame the prescribing physician publicly
  • Hold the medication, assess risk, contact the prescriber, and document the incident
  • Dispense immediately and hope for the best
  • Destroy the medication without reporting

Correct Answer: Hold the medication, assess risk, contact the prescriber, and document the incident

Q21. Empathy in patient interactions is best shown by:

  • Providing sympathy but not listening
  • Recognizing feelings, validating concerns, and offering support
  • Changing the subject to avoid discomfort
  • Offering unrelated advice

Correct Answer: Recognizing feelings, validating concerns, and offering support

Q22. Which is an important principle when communicating risk information to patients?

  • Present only relative risk figures to emphasize danger
  • Use absolute risk, simple language, and visual aids to explain probability
  • Omit risks to avoid causing anxiety
  • Give statistics without context

Correct Answer: Use absolute risk, simple language, and visual aids to explain probability

Q23. Conflict resolution between pharmacist and prescriber is aided by:

  • Adopting aggressive posture to win the argument
  • Clarifying goals, using evidence, and seeking collaborative solutions
  • Refusing to discuss patient care further
  • Complaining to patients about the prescriber

Correct Answer: Clarifying goals, using evidence, and seeking collaborative solutions

Q24. The teach-back method is least useful when:

  • Assessing a patient’s comprehension after counselling
  • Reinforcing self-management instructions for chronic disease
  • When objective outcome measures exist, such as lab tests, and immediate comprehension is less critical
  • Providing complex multi-step administration instructions

Correct Answer: When objective outcome measures exist, such as lab tests, and immediate comprehension is less critical

Q25. When documenting a medication-related phone call, the pharmacist should include:

  • Only the time of call
  • Time, caller identity, issue discussed, advice given, and follow-up plan
  • Personal opinions about the caller
  • Unverified clinical speculation

Correct Answer: Time, caller identity, issue discussed, advice given, and follow-up plan

Q26. Effective counselling for inhaler technique should involve:

  • Giving verbal instructions only
  • Demonstration, return demonstration by the patient, and reinforcement
  • Assuming the patient knows how and skipping demonstration
  • Reading the leaflet without practice

Correct Answer: Demonstration, return demonstration by the patient, and reinforcement

Q27. In an interprofessional team meeting, a pharmacist’s key communication role is to:

  • Criticize other professionals’ decisions
  • Provide medication expertise, clinical evidence, and clear recommendations
  • Remain silent and observe only
  • Promote non-evidence-based therapies

Correct Answer: Provide medication expertise, clinical evidence, and clear recommendations

Q28. Which phrase best opens a sensitive discussion about adherence?

  • You always forget your medicines, don’t you?
  • Many patients find it hard to take medicines every day. How has it been for you?
  • I don’t want to hear excuses
  • Just take it or you will suffer consequences

Correct Answer: Many patients find it hard to take medicines every day. How has it been for you?

Q29. For safe telephone prescriptions, pharmacists should:

  • Accept verbal orders without confirmation
  • Read back the prescription details to confirm accuracy
  • Assume sound quality is sufficient without verification
  • Transcribe from memory later

Correct Answer: Read back the prescription details to confirm accuracy

Q30. Which is a sign of effective pharmacist-prescriber collaboration over medication therapy management?

  • Lack of documentation and informal verbal agreements
  • Shared decision-making, timely communication, and documented plans
  • One-way directives without discussion
  • Ignoring evidence and relying on habits

Correct Answer: Shared decision-making, timely communication, and documented plans

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