- Joined
- Feb 25, 2016
- Messages
- 178
- Reaction score
- 52
Serious question, but how do you pharmacists fill quickly?
I don't the techs do
Try counting by 30. You'll be done even faster.I actually count by 3's instead of 5's, I think it's faster but get made fun of for it.
Serious question, but how do you pharmacists fill quickly?
They try to transform you into a machine in retail
Practice. I was a mediocre PIC my second year as a pharmacist at an understaffed CVS. My techs knew I wasn't great, but my attitude/personality made working with me okay (I think). One day we had pharmacist overlap so I had a chance to fill prescriptions while someone else verified. My techs were blown away and couldn't keep up with me. I told them that I was a crappy pharmacist because I had only been doing it for ~18 months, but I had been a tech for over a decade, so I was pretty good at it.
Sent from my iPhone using SDN mobile
If you have a script for 90 pills and you have an unopened bottle of 100 on the shelf along with an opened bottle, just take 10 out of the new bottle and dump them into the bottle that's already opened. Not proper procedure but **** it. I'd only do this if you scan all the bottles to make sure they are correct first though.
Misbranding and adulteration of medication. Plus it messes with recalls. Just leave that bottle of 10 on the shelf
I'm alone a lot of the time (we do 350:week in the winter) so I count a lot. I'm a proponent of leaving stuff in sealed stock bottles. Saves time and I like it
Serious question, but how do you pharmacists fill quickly?
Ok maybe I am just too tired to think straight but how is that misbranding or adulteration?Misbranding and adulteration of medication. Plus it messes with recalls. Just leave that bottle of 10 on the shelf
I'm alone a lot of the time (we do 350:week in the winter) so I count a lot. I'm a proponent of leaving stuff in sealed stock bottles. Saves time and I like it
Ok maybe I am just too tired to think straight but how is that misbranding or adulteration?
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G920A using SDN mobile
Do either of those things count as misbranding or adulteration? Because this happens every time you use more than one stock bottle to fill a prescription...Potentially mixing lot numbers or expiration dates? That's all I can think of.
Do either of those things count as misbranding or adulteration? Because this happens every time you use more than one stock bottle to fill a prescription...
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G920A using SDN mobile
Misbranding via putting it into a bottle with a different lot/exp date. Med with unknown exp date/recalled on shelf potentially being sold
adulteration, Misbranded medications mixed with "good" medication
If it wasn't illegal what's to stop me from just dumping exp medication into a newer stock bottle
Return to stock vials may have more than 1 lot but they are short dated and handled differently in every place I've been to account for this issue
The stock bottle for sure given the different lot/exp than what is printed on the bottle. The vial probably not since you don't print that information on the vial.So you have two bottles with multiple lots in them, a vial and a stock bottle. Which one is misbranded?
How many tab you guys count per scoop? I see most people do 5, some people do 3 and 2. Which way is faster?
I guess my question should be which one is easier (not to loss count/miss count) and yet fast.If three is faster than five, wouldn't one at a time be faster still?
I guess my question should be which one is easier (not to loss count/miss count) and yet fast.
I used to count by 5's but switched to 3's because it is less error prone and just as fast.How many tab you guys count per scoop? I see most people do 5, some people do 3 and 2. Which way is faster?