- Joined
- Mar 16, 2008
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This looks awesome! However, the cons of this could be people getting mugged for prescriptions. I am fairly sure that a lot of the "300 most common drugs" are painkillers of CII-CIV variety.
However, if the bar-coding of a prescription makes it incapable of being altered, I am all for it.
Additional potential cons would be "slow-oriented" customers (the elderly maybe); the time it will take for them to figure out that it isn't an ATM + the time it will take them to do all that scanning etc...you know. And that would mean longer lines made of murder-intent customers.
But if they can tag along efficient solutions with those cons, I welcome the idea very much. It will potentially reduce the common risks that retail pharmacies in particular, have long been facing. Oxytocin robberies being a perfect example.
Nope...lots of pregnant women just want that baby out!You mean oxycodone, right?
You mean oxycodone, right?
Haha, wasn't there a robber who made the same mistake? Funny stuff.