I have a B.S. from a four year university, took the prereq courses along with my degree (many of which were a part of my degree), took the PCAT, got letters or recommendation, etc. and applied through PharmCAS.
I have a B.S. from a four year university, took the prereq courses along with my degree (many of which were a part of my degree), took the PCAT, got letters or recommendation, etc. and applied through PharmCAS.
Pharmacy Tech is not a 2 year degree. You can get the CphT by taking an easy test (PTCE) and passing it.
That said, baggers at Fry's have a union (as do those at grocery stores) thus their pay is naturally going to be higher than those without unions.
When I started as a pharm tech at a grocery store I had to be in the union and was forced to start at $7.35 an hour. So my experience has been union pay sucks at first but can get better. You have to follow all the rules about pay raises and you are given raises based on hours work, not performance (What a great system!!! 😡) I think where I work at the grocery store techs top out around $16/hour. So it is better, it just usually takes around 5 years to do it. And I think there is still a 2 year tech degree in my state. But I do know the CC I went to cancelled theirs a few years back because people realized it wasn't necessary.
Texas, Retail Pharmacy, No Exp. other than compounding, college degree, I get paid $8.90, yeah, it sucks.
In the hospital, techs don't have to deal with patients in their face or insurance... however, there are about 10 or so different areas that techs are put to work in my hospital (where you get put varies daily and depends on how much experience you have). Some of the different jobs we have are working the stat counter (answering phone calls, looking up patient med profiles, answering nurse & dr questions), working in the IV room (make IVs, pretty much), entering TPN orders, refilling the PYXIS machines, troubleshooting the PYXIS machines, working in the pediatric pharmacy (stat counter/po meds/iv meds), working in one of three different chemo pharmacies, working in OR pharmacy, working in outpatient pharmacy, non-PYXIS med delivery, packaging medications, unloading and shelving the medication delivery order for the day etc...these are each jobs that we have for the whole day- there are many many different things to do and learn as a hospital tech! There are other components of those jobs too, like the previous poster mentioned- exchanging & restocking crash (code) cards, etc. Basically, the more places you can work and the more experience you have, the higher the pay scale. Hope this helps. 🙂
Yes, I know this is an old thread that's been resurrected, but I just have to say that it's amazing to me that pharm techs make that much less than I do as a patient care associate. As a PCA, I take vital signs, do EKGs, draw blood, clean up patients, assist with ADLs, run errands, etc., and I make just over $19/hr. The knowledge base seems to be so much larger for pharm techs (I'm studying for the PTCE, and there's SO much more to know as a pharm tech than a PCA/clinical tech/etc)! I don't know, I just had to say that, maybe I'm alone on that.
At the company I work for, technicians make $21.50.
what company is that?
My first pharmacy tech job at CVS was back in 2006 when my only work experience was my first job ever at a Burger King. So that would be a no for me. However that was 6 years ago, and the job market is not the same.hi;
I wonder how can somebody ask for a pharm tech. job without any experience? I'm volunteering at a pharmacy right now and one of the head technician tells me that it's hard to get a job w/o experience and she suggests me to be a clerk first. What do you think? Please give me advice, thanx🙂
hi;
I wonder how can somebody ask for a pharm tech. job without any experience? I'm volunteering at a pharmacy right now and one of the head technician tells me that it's hard to get a job w/o experience and she suggests me to be a clerk first. What do you think? Please give me advice, thanx🙂
I know this is a late reply, but I saw you live in NYC, and I would think that makes a big difference. Pharm techs there might make a lot more than they do in most other places due to the high cost of living there. In Texas, the cost of living is a lot lower, and at the hospital where I used to work the PCAs only got paid around $10/hr, whereas I was making over $16/hr as a pharmacy tech.