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tuition increases will eventually make people realize that pharmacy is not worth it. Changing the degree from a bachelors to a doctorate was a complete stupid load of BS. But its a great way for schools to charge more than double the tuition for the same f-ing degree. Eventually there will be a breaking point where it is simply not worth the debt. It has probably already surpassed that point.
f there is no more seats then why extended deadline in first place.
Translation:
Not bad, guys. I have a question. What does "2.5 pre-everything" mean? Is this a reference to their GPA and major?
Disagree. The corporatization of retail pharmacy is a symptom of the underlying problem which is the number of pharmacy schools/graduates each year. When the supply of new grad pharmacists outpaces demand by a factor of 9 each year, then it’s obvious what the market will do: cut hours. If they didn’t then there would be many more unemployed/underemployed pharmacists than there are today because by creating 5 “jobs” at 24 hrs/week compared to having 3 jobs at 40 hrs a week you actually do the job market a favor by absorbing more pharmacists. If they didn’t start clamping down on metrics, then they would need to hire enough Rphs to be adequately staffed (2 overlapping Rphs at CVS at all times, for example), but then you’d get Rphs sitting around twiddling their thumbs when it’s “slow” which is just wasting company money. Once the number of available pharmacists in the market ballooned past a certain point, the “worth” of any particular pharmacist began to deteriorate rapidly because you can always find a new replacement the next day. So the PharmD degree which was once considered a “commodity” is now a worthless piece of paper with a name on it.I think the fault falls on the board of pharmacy in every state. We all know that Walgreens/CVS are the dominants in this market and those two retailers, while competing with each other, completely downgraded and degraded this industry. It's not the number of schools out there and the number of graduates out there and instead, it's the tight squeeze on every pharmacist to put in intense labor hours processing hundred of prescription in a short period of time and putting patients in jeopardy.
Disagree. The corporatization of retail pharmacy is a symptom of the underlying problem which is the number of pharmacy schools/graduates each year. When the supply of new grad pharmacists outpaces demand by a factor of 9 each year, then it’s obvious what the market will do: cut hours. If they didn’t then there would be many more unemployed/underemployed pharmacists than there are today because by creating 5 “jobs” at 24 hrs/week compared to having 3 jobs at 40 hrs a week you actually do the job market a favor by absorbing more pharmacists. If they didn’t start clamping down on metrics, then they would need to hire enough Rphs to be adequately staffed (2 overlapping Rphs at CVS at all times, for example), but then you’d get Rphs sitting around twiddling their thumbs when it’s “slow” which is just wasting company money. Once the number of available pharmacists in the market ballooned past a certain point, the “worth” of any particular pharmacist began to deteriorate rapidly because you can always find a new replacement the next day. So the PharmD degree which was once considered a “commodity” is now a worthless piece of paper with a name on it.
I recommend that you look into how Sea World gets away with overworking and underpaying their dolphin/orca trainers— they’re stuck in their jobs with no leverage because if they complain or threaten to quit then they’ve got 50 people standing in line to replace them (obviously not knowing how horrid the conditions are) and it’s “next man up” mentality. It’s not just a pharmacy thing. It’s a common phenomenom that happens in any profession when there’s saturation.
No point to buy life insurance if you don't have dependents."When the supply of new grad pharmacists outpaces demand by a factor of 9 each year" i love this quote. This exactly. What will happen? the same thing that always happens. Positions get way more competitive. ONly the best networkers get the jobs. If you are not extroverted and hyper-assertive you will not be able to survive in a saturated climate. Work conditions will get worse as companies are able to get rid of expendable pharmacist positions. Luckily I am willing to work for as low as 17 USD an hour as a pharmacist so i should be OKAY but who knows. I have a plan B ready in place in case i 1a can't get a job 1b can't find a position paying at least 17 USD an hour. I suggest all new grads should have a plan B in place.
I also have a life insurance plan that covers suicide after two years in case my mental health nose dives. I am not suicidal and have never been but I love getting insurance because it helps me sleep at night by lowering my anxiety and helping me feel safe.
you need to ask yourself:
what regional managers and VPs do i know from company X that can guarantee me a full time position.
My dependent is the Wikipedia Foundation. I have them listed as my beneficiary.No point to buy life insurance if you don't have dependents.
The problem is that there will always be some gullible students who are willing to go into pharmacy if they think they will make 120k. All pharmacy schools have to do lower their standards and they will always have full classes.
Pharmacists have long been great, unrecognized providers of public health. It’s our accessibility and skill in helping people immediately that really sets us apart.
However, now that the great dream of being untethered from the product is becoming reality, we’ll be chasing STAR ratings that at this point are ridiculously narrow in scope. Does anyone really believe it takes a pharmacist to address “adherence” tips or recommend a statin? Soon state laws will allow technicians to administer vaccines and tech-check-tech. I don’t know about you, but I feel like a cheap salesperson when calling patients to recommend some service or other.
While our profession advances in a scholastic sense, we are being crushed by excessive graduates, PBMs, insane wholesale prices, and corporate influence on state boards of pharmacy.
This will be an intangible loss to the public (who DO pay us one way or another) and the decay of a very gratifying aspect of our profession.
RIP
Pharmacists have long been great, unrecognized providers of public health. It’s our accessibility and skill in helping people immediately that really sets us apart.
However, now that the great dream of being untethered from the product is becoming reality, we’ll be chasing STAR ratings that at this point are ridiculously narrow in scope. Does anyone really believe it takes a pharmacist to address “adherence” tips or recommend a statin? Soon state laws will allow technicians to administer vaccines and tech-check-tech. I don’t know about you, but I feel like a cheap salesperson when calling patients to recommend some service or other.
While our profession advances in a scholastic sense, we are being crushed by excessive graduates, PBMs, insane wholesale prices, and corporate influence on state boards of pharmacy.
This will be an intangible loss to the public (who DO pay us one way or another) and the decay of a very gratifying aspect of our profession.
RIP
Techs are giving vaccines in ID. It has been working fine so far from what I've seen.Not to be mean, and techs run the pharmacy, but I don't see techs giving vaccines to the general public and them (public) being ok with it. Sure, it's easy as throwing a dart into a piece of meat, but I just don't see that happening.
Tech check tech with my license on the line? No thanks.
Retail pharmacy is well and truly finished.. New grads are already offered lower salaries at 48 hours/ 2 weeks. Old folks are getting laid off because there isn’t business need.
If this isn’t the end, I don’t know what it is.
hi everyone what can we do to make things better? advocate for expand roles? i think pharmacist are ideal for educating public and creating health classes etc lets think of solutions! im sick of talking abt the problem we all the know the probs
Exactly. Who cares what you can do, what's important is what others are willing to pay for.Lol. The problem is money. Figure out how to make more money.
The only way pharmacists can save their profession is to all, in unison, dig in and stop providing services like that for free.It's not the end of the profession, but the end for the pharmacists who chose this path for all the wrong reasons. If you want an easy job with a six figure salary and low risk, then you're definitely in the wrong field. No one's going to pay you for contributing nothing.
From my retail perspective, I deal with patients on a daily basis. I talk to them, help them understand why taking their medication is important, and genuinely provide care when possible. I provide value. So, for example, I had a patient call me today (Mondays, ugh) to fill his "expensive, useless white pill." That pill was for cholesterol. I chuckled and politely explained that this prescription, although seemingly unimportant, was doing a good job for his cholesterol and that his body would care if he took it. I then asked if he'd like a 90 day to save a bit of money. He paused for a bit, then said, yes. I think all this took less than a minute and while conversing, I verified a few RXs at the same time too because #efficiency.
It's the little victories like this that bring me joy. Yeah, staff hours are bad, workload is high, and reimbursement rates are even worse. So, just do what you can, make a difference when possible, and hold your head high at the end.
Isn’t that part of the argument for provider status? We can then bill for this stuff.The only way pharmacists can save their profession is to all, in unison, dig in and stop providing services like that for free.
Stop identifying pills for free.
Stop answering rando phone questions for free.
Stop doing OTC consults for free.
Stop doing DURs for free. They're required by law in every state and we're the only ones that can do them. How did we arrive here?
The only way pharmacists can save their profession is to all, in unison, dig in and stop providing services like that for free.
How did we arrive here?