Do you think becoming a pharmacy tech versus becoming just an ancillary at a Pharmacy will increase your chances of getting admitted into pharmacy school by a lot?
you also have to remember that most pharm schools 'recommend' pharmacy experience- they don't exactly require them. but i can tell you from experience that experience definitely helps during interviews, especially situational ones. last year when i didn't have retail pharm experience (i only volunteered at a hospital pharmacy and did filing in the computer and other assorted admin work), UW asked me a bunch of situational questions that i wasn't able to answer. Like, "When a doctor calls in for a prescription, what does a pharmacist need to know before she fills and dispenses it to the patient?" All I said was, the correct drug, drug profile of the patient, any allergic reactions. Another question was "What are you going to do if a patient refuses to buy their meds because they're over $200 and you know as a pharmacist that if they don't take them, it's detrimental to their health?" All I said was inform them of the health risks if they don't take it, and ultimately it's up to them if they want to buy it.
I'm telling you, my head was blank. But now that I've worked at a retail pharm for a few months, I can answer both of those questions with confidence and with the most correct answers. To the first question: Doctor's info (DEA, State Lic #, address, phone, fax), patient's info (name, DOB, phone), name, strength, and form of the drug, and the sig. To the second question: We can refer them to clinics for low-income people, which we normally do, and we have 2 around the area, whose copay is approx $0-10 depending on how needy you are.
So all I'm saying is, pharmacy experience can certainly enhance your interview responses. it impresses them at the things you know, compared to those without experience. and maybe an acceptance letter will on the way
🙂
i know it's a long response.. i have too much time in my hands this morning
