Consumer trust in decentralized care sites is growing, spurred by desire for more convenient and affordable options.The days of patients receiving all medical care at a hospital or physician’s office are over, and a new survey, commissioned by Wolters Kluwer Health, shows the shift is due to growing trust in providers in non-traditional primary care settings driven by a desire for more convenient and affordable care. The second Pharmacy Next: Consumer Care and Cost Trends survey data also show generational trends that suggest this shift in the healthcare ecosystem is permanent and will change how all stakeholders approach care delivery in the coming years.
“As we saw in last year’s survey, primary care decentralization is continuing – the traditional one doctor-one patient, single point of coordination is vanishing, and this is especially evident in younger generations,” said Peter Bonis, MD, Chief Medical Officer, Wolters Kluwer Health. “By preparing for this shift today, providers can work in concert across care sites to deliver the best care to patients. Likewise, newer care delivery models, like retail pharmacies and clinics, can ensure they’re ready to meet the expectations of healthcare consumers, who will increasingly be turning to them for a growing range of care needs.”
Care is rapidly decentralizing, and Gen Z and Millennial consumers are leading the way
Pharmacies are becoming a front-line site for non-emergency care, particularly among younger generations. This shift is still confined mostly to retail pharmacy, versus emerging care sites such as health clinics in department stores, such as Walmart or Target, with 80% of consumers saying they would probably never go to a department store for healthcare. The survey also found consumers will go to different care sites depending on the services they need.
Key data findings include:
- First stop, the pharmacy: 58% of Americans are likely to visit a local pharmacy as a first step when faced with a non-emergency medical issue. 81% say they trust a pharmacist, nurse, or nurse practitioner to diagnose minor illnesses and prescribe medications to treat them.
- Generational divide: More than half of Gen Z and Millennials (56% and 54%) have visited a local pharmacy to receive care in the past year, compared to 40% of Gen X and 35% of Boomers.
- Department store trust deficit: 79% of Americans trust their local pharmacy to provide care more than clinic staff at department stores.
- Vaccination variations: 54% of Americans would go to a traditional physician’s office only for vaccinations for children, but for flu shots and other vaccinations for adults, over three in five (62%) would go to a local pharmacy.