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- Sep 22, 2016
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What was the first RX y'all put your name on?! Curious!
Ranitidine 150mg 1bid #180
PDX DOS! Memories
Ranitidine 150mg 1bid #180
PDX DOS! Memories
What do you do that requires the license?I've had a pharmacist license for more than 20 years and still haven't verified a prescription.
mine was misreading a poorly written rx for azopt instead of cosopt.I don’t remember my first script but I do remember my first error. I mixed up amlodipine-atorvastatin and amlodipine-benazopril. Super nice old lady. Thankfully she wasn’t harmed.
Nothing I have ever done for a job has fallen under the pharmacy practice act of whatever state I've lived in. At this point the license is a security blanket more than anything else - perhaps the next job will require me to be licensed. I keep one license - from a state where I lived three states ago - because the license is an original license, it is pretty inexpensive, and the CE requirements aren't excessively cumbersome.What do you do that requires the license?
Sadly, mine was the same, although mine was buprenorphine…but then again my mind generally doesn’t give a **** remembering brand vs generic and has bias just remembering things in my native language (generic)Suboxone film. Don't remember directions or qty.
I don’t remember my first script but I do remember my first error. I mixed up amlodipine-atorvastatin and amlodipine-benazopril. Super nice old lady. Thankfully she wasn’t harmed.
Do you mind sharing what the actual job is? Not trying to pry or anything but it sounds interesting.Nothing I have ever done for a job has fallen under the pharmacy practice act of whatever state I've lived in. At this point the license is a security blanket more than anything else - perhaps the next job will require me to be licensed. I keep one license - from a state where I lived three states ago - because the license is an original license, it is pretty inexpensive, and the CE requirements aren't excessively cumbersome.
My first week at work, some scary guy walks in, walks right behind the counter. He shows me his badge and I saw his gun. No formal introduction needed. He was a Georgia State Drugs and Narcotics inspector. Very well known in Georgia, Rick Allen! He asked for my license, I whipped out the board letter from my back pocket. He says "son, you are so lucky! Most new pharmacist don't get to meet me for years!"
He wanted all the scripts written by a specific MD. Took whatever he wanted and gave me a hand written receipt.
He retired a few years ago.