Let me be more direct about this...
If the board views this process as unsafe or inappropriate they will engage CVS not all the individual pharmacists.
The potential penalty/fine/punishment from the board to an individual pharmacist is minimal to zero if you are following policy and procedure. If a significant error happened where you were completely reckless and not acting in accordance to the policy and procedures you may face some consequence from the board. Fines are typically limited and at the extreme you may lose your license or get it suspended. If it was one singular event and mistake it should be 0 penalty.
Now the mega million dollar lawsuits that some of you extreme anxiety pharmacists worry about require a lot of things to happen. First medical negligence is an extremely extremely hard thing to prove and win in actual court so the game is typically seek settlement. Now there’s a lot of state variability on standard of care and liability caps on what a max award a plaintiff could win if it actually goes to trial but one thing is almost universally true if a person or their estate is suing you for an error. There has to be damages, or in this case harm or injury, that occurred for them to make a claim on what is owed to them. This is why I said above an error even with ingestion, possibly even months worth of ingestion depending on the med and patient, might not stand up for a claim made against you as the pharmacist for an error. It’s possible if the patient seeks payment from cvs that they will try to quickly settle for a small amount to make it go away and keep it out of the news, but that’s a PR strategy and lawyer expense strategy. They likely settle wayyyy more claims than could actually win in court.
Now lastly in the event that super harm was done. Wrong thing went out, killed someone. Negligence has to truly be established. If someone or an estate is truly seeking the whale payout, they likely aren’t going to go the route of seeking this against the individual pharmacist. Like I said there’s often caps, judges and juries are more favorable to the little man healthcare worker and less so to the mega evil corporation. The big payout comes in the form of not just winning on personal damages but getting a huge company on punitive damages which would be more of a macro level offense they are found guilty of which is much broader and not applicable to the individual pharmacist.
All in all Joe pharmacist may be looked at as accountable by the board, but potential lawsuits costing him personally millions due to just following a new process his employer put in place. I see extremely extremely low to no possibility of. Again if you are reckless and or not doing what CVS tells you (corporate training not your DL) is the process.. all bets are off but still a better prize for them to go after cvs.