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I am afraid to ask this question- there is much problem-solving involved in the field of pharmacy? Can one be creative without being in the research track? or without being on the diagnosis side of health conditions?
a few i can think of:
"what can i piggyback with what? i have a trauma patient with only a triple lumen, but she needs at least 6 different drugs as well as blood? and, no, we can't get anymore lines in her"
"this patient is allergic to penicillin, but has tertiary syphilis. can you prepare serial dilutions of PCN so we can desensitize her and treat her?"
"we need to have patient specific barcodes for each medication given in the NICU, but the computer currently doesn't print barcodes. how can we get it to print drug and patient specific barcodes?"
"our epidurals don't scan in our medication administration system, so we can technically can't chart them. if we can't chart them, we can't hang them on the patient. can you fix the item, the barcode and how the system reads the barcode?"
Goood Gawd... Thank you for reminding me why I'm not a DOP no more!!!!
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i'm not a DOP...i'm a night schmuck!
😀
Thanks for replying, twester. I am aware that pharmacists are not the health professionals with the authority to diagnose illnesses/diseases. I should have elaborated on the last segment of my original post ("without being on the diagnosis side of things") that I was comparing to someone who does have this power to use their problem solving ability in the "traditional" sense in the health care field - ie. a physician/clinician. Now before people starts to send flying daggers at me for once again bring up the pharm.d vs m.d. debate, i am only trying to get a sense of a pharmacist's opportunity to use his/her problem solving skills in a non- disease diagnosing capacity; it is it is not my intent to offend anyone in the profession. Personally, I find pharmacology and toxicology more intriguing. I really want to learn about drug mechanisms and medication reactions in the human body, and the selective usage of medicinal properties to combat diseases. It is just that there seems to be a lot of people on this forum commenting about how their job/profession is not as stimulating as they would like and that the skills pharmacists acquired from their pharmacy education/training are underutilized. I am an inquisitive individual, and would like to be like a detective and problem solve. Correct me if I am wrong, are there areas other than of pharmacotherapy, pharmacoepidemiology and research that these tendencies/ skills would be greatly beneficial / essential?