recently hired as a CVS pharmacist with minimal retail experience

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ilovepills

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So I graduated from pharmacy school last year and was recently hired to work with CVS most likely as a floater for at least a few months for now. I delayed applying to retail because of hearing about many complaints about working in the big retail chains (high stress, no breaks, less help so that they can profit more, etc). I am almost finished with my training (allowed only 40 hours) at CVS and expected to start on my own after that. I've been trying to learn as much as I can at the store but it is very hard because things happen so fast and I have really never been exposed to it. It is considered a medium volume store with a drive thru and I guess because of budget cuts and reduction in staff hours it can get pretty busy at times. Whenever I get stuck I'll ask for help because I don't want the customer to wait and because the metric will suffer. So someone will quickly solve whatever I get stuck and I didn't learn much. I even have a hard time typing up prescriptions that are not po (creams, ointments, neb,etc) because the med can come in vials, packets). I understand the general concepts of QT,QD,QP,QV. My only exposure to retail was thru my rotations and my experiences were pretty bad (mostly counting and getting and returning meds from the shelf).

So I am really concerned about working on my own soon since my training is almost done. I realize that many of the problems will first appear on the QT screen and the techs can usually work on it if I get stuck. So should I be concerned that there is still a lot about the workflow I don't understand and don't know how to process it or should I just try to focus on verifying and get good at that for now and hopefully I will understand the workflow better with time? I am really freaking out now and think that due to my incompetency and being slow I will get fired soon....

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CVS makes you feel like **** regardless of experience. Don't overwhelm yourself. Let the techs focus on qt, register. Do qp and qv to start.

So many people quit, not many people get fired for incompetency. Especially if your sup knows you are just starting out and learning.

When you have the chance at any other job, you should bounce from cvs. Think of CVS as "boot camp" for pharmacists.
 
Appreciate your post. Made me feel better.

I even wanted to work off the clock for more practice given that only 40 hours was allowed for training but the PIC at the store I was training said to not work off the clock. So I'm not sure how I can learn the systemwithout being in the pharmacy since the online modules are barely helpful to me.
 
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Appreciate your post. Made me feel better.

I even wanted to work off the clock for more practice given that only 40 hours was allowed for training but the PIC at the store I was training said to not work off the clock. So I'm not sure how I can learn the systemwithout being in the pharmacy since the online modules are barely helpful to me.

As a pharmacist you are a salaried employee and there is no "clock." That doesn't even make any sense.
 
??? There is absolutely a clock. CVS counts on pharmacists to work extra "for free" to keep up their metrics. Don't fall into that trap.

Look, be grateful for your job. Do your best and you will be fine. No new pharmacist, especially a CVS pharmacist ever feels 100% ready. But as mentioned above, keep in the back of your mind that you will likely never feel content at CVS. They just don't structure it that way. They are fine with high turnover.

In the meantime, your checks will clear, you will make decent enough money, and keep updating your apps. If you want a hospital gig try and get something within a year so you aren't forever labeled a "retail" pharmacist....not that there is anything wrong with that, it's a good job, but it appears you were trying for a hospital gig and the longer you're out of a hospital the harder it will be to get back into one. Per diem if necessary. Move if necessary. I still know quite a few people still getting hired straight into a hospital setting without a residency. You just have to be flexible about where it may take you. One of them was in the suburbs of Chicago, so they aren't all boondocks jobs.

Congrats on the job, and enjoy the fruits of your labor. You will do just fine!
 
As a pharmacist you are a salaried employee and there is no "clock." That doesn't even make any sense.

No offense, but this is stupid advice, and if you work for CVS, never, ever listen to this. You are on the clock when you come in until you are scheduled to leave. You never stay extra for free. CVS will try always to make you stay for free. You decide what you want to do. If your supervisor ever tells you to come in for free, document it all the time, record it on your phone, get it in an email, and file a lawsuit.
 
CVS makes you feel like **** regardless of experience. Don't overwhelm yourself. Let the techs focus on qt, register. Do qp and qv to start.

So many people quit, not many people get fired for incompetency. Especially if your sup knows you are just starting out and learning.

When you have the chance at any other job, you should bounce from cvs. Think of CVS as "boot camp" for pharmacists.

This is great advice, I totally agree with everything said.
 
As a pharmacist you are a salaried employee and there is no "clock." That doesn't even make any sense.

This depends on the state. In CA, CVS pharmacists are hourly, so we truly do punch in, out for lunch, in from lunch, and out. OT (more than 8 hours/day) is usually not allowed
 
We all know that on boarding/training of new pharmacists at CVS is terrible. I'm also not a big supporter of working off the clock, especially if you are floating. So it is up to you how you want to learn, because at the beginning, that is all it is about. If you want to learn on the clock, with an impatient customer giving you hard time and inexperienced tech unable to do anything, that is all fine. I was lucky enough not to float, and have some overlap where I could ask for help from my partner. I also had excellent techs to start during peak hours. However, if you are in a low volume store and can't resolve issues quickly enough on your own, you will have hard time.

Forget about the metrics at the beginning. Learn to be a pharmacist.
 
Honestly just worry about QV, and if you are caught up/ahead you can print and pull drugs for production tech or pull up the QT and type some escripts for drop-off tech.
 
Don't know why you guys are so adamant about not working extra "off the clock". There are plenty of professions where salaried employees have to take work home or stay late. I would rather stay 30 minutes to get caught up instead of coming in the next day to a mess.
 
Don't know why you guys are so adamant about not working extra "off the clock". There are plenty of professions where salaried employees have to take work home or stay late. I would rather stay 30 minutes to get caught up instead of coming in the next day to a mess.

Most people would, especially if it was a once in awhile type of thing (really busy day) or you it was your own fault you were behind.

The problem is that CVS is too damn cheap to pay an extra tech $8 an hour and you are understaffed DAILY. You end up staying late not to get caught up but rather to compensate for your employers terrible staffing. If you come in an hour early every day to stay caught up all you are doing is proving to your employer that low staffing is sufficient.
 
if you are a floater, never pull drugs. You'll be standing around doing nothing (looking for drugs)...even though it's alphabetical order, pulling will slow you down tremendously. I would tell tech to pull and you help fill.
 
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I’ve been lurking here on the forums here for a while and love all the CVS bashing. I felt the exact same as OP when I was first licensed about 7 months ago. CVS pretty much sets you up to fail and you have to learn a lot of things for yourself when you first start. That being said, I feel like I have improved exponentially over the past 7 months and I think my experiences can help you quite a bit.

Here are my store stats in case any of you CVS peeps wanna chime in.

-1300-1500/wk

-105-115 tech hours

-8a-9p

The most important thing to understand about working at CVS is that efficiency is paramount. In my experience, the biggest loss of efficiency is when you change tasks. For example consider the following two scenarios when filling 10 prescriptions:

Type 1 rx, count 1 rx, verify 1 rx. = 5min X 10 RXs = 50min

Type 10 rx, count 10 rx, verify 10 rx = 30min

Just a rough estimate, but the point is that the more repetitive movements/actions you perform the less time you will lose to transition. Keep this in mind as you’re reading my post. You can apply this concept to nearly every task at CVS and it will save you time. Never do just 1 thing, if you’re going to do something, do it 10 times.


1. Forget about the metrics. As many people above have correctly pointed out, learning the system is too overwhelming to worry about the metrics when you first start. That being said, if you want to please the PIC, MCE is the most important. Customer surveys have the biggest impact on this, not ready when promised. So the take away is even if all the ques are orange and past due, making people happy is always the key. If you are completely swamped, look terrified and tell them you’re swamped. In my experience, people understand the human aspect and it won’t affect your numbers as much.

2. Forget about the phone when it’s busy. Don’t ignore it all day like some chains (ahem, WAGS). But if you have 3 waiters, 4 people dropping off and 4 people picking up, with just you and 1 tech, guess who doesn’t get a survey and a chance to rate you poorly??? The customer on the phone. So just let that bad boy ring.

3. Work as fast as you SAFELY can. Obviously you won’t be fast at first, but within 1-2 months you’ll start to pick up the speed. The human brain is an incredible thing. Before you know it you will have the steps to typing an E-script memorized to the point that you will be entering key strokes and credentialing before you see the prompt. Even if it isn’t busy, the faster you get things done the better your life will be. The point is, the farther you are ahead, the less it’s gonna suck when you get slammed with CIIs, waiters, doctor calls ect. I feel like a lot of pharmacists work on things that are important within the next hour instead of considering workflow for the entire day.

4. Don’t Panic. CVS gets crazy and it gets worse if you panic. Say you have a technician call out and around 4pm you find yourself with 10-20 past due in each que. You immediately think about the metrics and how you need to get caught up as fast as possible. Keep in mind, it’s a numbers game. 60 past due scripts out of 1500 is not going to ruin your weekly numbers, it will decrease them, but not ruin them. I have made the mistake of trying to type, count then verify one script at time to keep things from going past due and that’s the worst thing you can do. Efficiency is lost when you change tasks. This means that the best way to get caught up is to focus on one que at a time and don’t waste time changing tasks. You also don’t want your technicians to panic. In my experience when you panic, your tech panics and when your tech panics, the customers get treated poorly. Even though they probably deserve it, you have to keep them happy.

5. Lean on your technicians. No they didn’t go to pharmacy school, but they have been working in a pharmacy (and specifically, for CVS) for much longer than you. Don’t be afraid to ask questions when you don’t know how to do something. I know CVS drills into your head that you need to appear to be all-knowing and never appear weak to your technicians but this is not reality, not when you first start. If you work hard they will respect you and work hard for you no matter how incompetent you seem at first. If you need help with a pharmacist task, call other stores in your district. Before I even started as a pharmacist I was on first name basis with 5-6 pharmacists in the district that I had met through various training exercises. Remember their names and their store numbers and they can help you a great deal.

6. Tips for each station. Some of these are “best practices” simply because they make sense and they work, others are things I’ve just figured out with trial and error.

Triage (QT):

-Triage is most important to keep caught up/ahead because after a script leaves triage, it goes to QP, then QV. For this reason backups in triage will punish you more than any other que.

-Try to clean it out in the morning before you open. This won’t be possible at busy stores or until you can handle all the rejections by yourself, but it helps a great deal

- If you can’t handle rejections work out of (QD) and just type e-scripts. Utilize the “1P” feature of RX connect. If you are unsure of package size for inhalers, fridge stuff and patches then the typing “1P” in the quantity box will solve most of your problems. There are exceptions but you’ll learn them.

- When grabbing scripts at drop you need a routine (especially for CIIs) to make sure you get all the right info before the person leaves. I know CVS wants you to type while they stand there, but most people make a paper airplane out of the thing and just fly to you as they walk out. I usually ask “Have we filled for you before?” give the RX a once over. Make sure you see everything you need to fill it (DOB, quantity, and DEA are the most frequent missing). Lastly if it’s a CII, as you pull up their profile to see if “we’ve filled for them before”, check the date it was last filled. There’s nothing worse than doing all the work to fill a CII only to realize it’s too soon when you verify it.

Production (QP):

- Don’t accuracy scan something until you’re sure you have enough to complete the fill. If you know you don’t have enough to complete the fill, you can easily add it to order from the production que. However, if you complete the accuracy scan and THEN realize you don’t have enough pills, it takes a few extra steps to add it to the order. Not a big deal, but still something to keep in mind.

Verification (QV):

- Pay attention to “Fill number” when verifying. If a script has been filled at least twice before (you will see “fill 02” in top left corner of the first verification page) then skip the first page of verification. There is no need to verify data entry for something the patient has already taken for 60 days. The ONLY thing you need to do is make sure the right drug was dispensed. This will save you tons of time when verifying refills. Verification should be the fastest step to filling and RX, don’t overcomplicate it.

- Hold your ground on controlled substances. Whatever you and your partner have decided on (most CVS will do 3 days early) is LAW. Don’t ever let people intimidate you. If it comes to it, blame the law. “ I’m sorry it’s federal law, if I fill this now and I am audited I can lose my license to practice”. Your customers don’t know any different and they don’t even know where to look to disprove you.

-There are options when filling controls early if you feel comfortable with it. If the patient hits you with the typical “I lost my RX, I’m going on vacation, I’m changing dose” story, then offer to call the MD to verify its ok to fill early. This will either corroborate their story, or scare them away if they’re trying to scam you. Either way, its lets them know that they don’t make the rules.


I know this is long but hopefully it helps you. Some of these lessons were hard learned for me and some of them are things I’ve just discovered in the last couple of weeks. You won’t get fired for bad metrics unless you are PIC (and probably not even then) so don’t sweat it. Good luck.
 
Don't know why you guys are so adamant about not working extra "off the clock". There are plenty of professions where salaried employees have to take work home or stay late. I would rather stay 30 minutes to get caught up instead of coming in the next day to a mess.

Personally I don't have a problem doing "off the clock" within reason. As pointed out, the most common reason it is not done often is resentment. The other reason is pharmacists used to pick up as many shifts as they wanted to. Why would they work for 'free' staying late, when they can pick up extra 1-2 shifts a week and get paid. That part is changing though but resentment keeps growing.
 
is it considered working for free when you are clueless and lack experience and become a burden for other employees? i call it donating /volunteering hours. it is not free when you are getting an education that you skipped out while in school. why were you not working weekends as an intern like most ppl do?... also, CVS paid 40 hours to train you. are you not willing to commit another 40 hours for free just to learn and pick up experience? last i check, you're willing to pay $20,000 a year to learn pharmacy practice! theres a saying, cry in dojo, laugh in battle. clearly you're not in dojo anymore. you're in battle. and if you're not well trained, you're not gonna survive. you're not gonna laugh. my classmates in your position always come home with teary eyes.. that is life.. you don't wait til the war begins to start training. but if it has begun, donate some hours to play catch up! that is if u want to do well in this world. otherwise do what other ppl do and leave a mess behind each and every shifts. we had a floater like that the previous monday, and it took us an entire week to turn the store around. forget pharmacists, is that the type of employee you want to become? ..this isn't even about CVS. even if they give you all the techs in the world you'll still leave a mess. if its about you, pls do something about it..
 
- Hold your ground on controlled substances. Whatever you and your partner have decided on (most CVS will do 3 days early) is LAW. Don’t ever let people intimidate you. If it comes to it, blame the law. “ I’m sorry it’s federal law, if I fill this now and I am audited I can lose my license to practice”. Your customers don’t know any different and they don’t even know where to look to disprove you.

Actually, illeger drug resellers will know the law backwards and forwards, so if you tell them something specific, they will quote the law back to you. It's better just to say that the DEA monitors early refills and that you are not comfortable filling that early. If they insist that "other pharmacists always" fill that early for them, then I tell them they will have to take their script to that "other pharmacist."

But yes, it is good to always back up your partner on early refills, even if I would have otherwise filled a script, if I know the other pharmacist told the person it couldn't be filled until such and such a date, that I will stick to that date. I have done the opposite, where supposedly the other pharmacist told the person that it would be filled on such and such a date (and it was probably a technician who really told them that) and I felt it was too early, then I will refuse to fill on that date.

-There are options when filling controls early if you feel comfortable with it. If the patient hits you with the typical “I lost my RX, I’m going on vacation, I’m changing dose” story, then offer to call the MD to verify its ok to fill early. This will either corroborate their story, or scare them away if they’re trying to scam you. Either way, its lets them know that they don’t make the rules.
To add to this, 9 out of 10 times, the person will ask that you NOT call their doctor, and say they will call the doctor themselves.....I ALWAYS call the doctor anyway in these situations, because they need to be aware that their patient is insisting on filling early (either because of a real change in health, or because of drug seeking behavior.)
 
I’ve been lurking here on the forums here for a while and love all the CVS bashing. I felt the exact same as OP when I was first licensed about 7 months ago. CVS pretty much sets you up to fail and you have to learn a lot of things for yourself when you first start. That being said, I feel like I have improved exponentially over the past 7 months and I think my experiences can help you quite a bit.

Here are my store stats in case any of you CVS peeps wanna chime in.

-1300-1500/wk

-105-115 tech hours

-8a-9p

The most important thing to understand about working at CVS is that efficiency is paramount. In my experience, the biggest loss of efficiency is when you change tasks. For example consider the following two scenarios when filling 10 prescriptions:

Type 1 rx, count 1 rx, verify 1 rx. = 5min X 10 RXs = 50min

Type 10 rx, count 10 rx, verify 10 rx = 30min

Just a rough estimate, but the point is that the more repetitive movements/actions you perform the less time you will lose to transition. Keep this in mind as you’re reading my post. You can apply this concept to nearly every task at CVS and it will save you time. Never do just 1 thing, if you’re going to do something, do it 10 times.


1. Forget about the metrics. As many people above have correctly pointed out, learning the system is too overwhelming to worry about the metrics when you first start. That being said, if you want to please the PIC, MCE is the most important. Customer surveys have the biggest impact on this, not ready when promised. So the take away is even if all the ques are orange and past due, making people happy is always the key. If you are completely swamped, look terrified and tell them you’re swamped. In my experience, people understand the human aspect and it won’t affect your numbers as much.

2. Forget about the phone when it’s busy. Don’t ignore it all day like some chains (ahem, WAGS). But if you have 3 waiters, 4 people dropping off and 4 people picking up, with just you and 1 tech, guess who doesn’t get a survey and a chance to rate you poorly??? The customer on the phone. So just let that bad boy ring.

3. Work as fast as you SAFELY can. Obviously you won’t be fast at first, but within 1-2 months you’ll start to pick up the speed. The human brain is an incredible thing. Before you know it you will have the steps to typing an E-script memorized to the point that you will be entering key strokes and credentialing before you see the prompt. Even if it isn’t busy, the faster you get things done the better your life will be. The point is, the farther you are ahead, the less it’s gonna suck when you get slammed with CIIs, waiters, doctor calls ect. I feel like a lot of pharmacists work on things that are important within the next hour instead of considering workflow for the entire day.

4. Don’t Panic. CVS gets crazy and it gets worse if you panic. Say you have a technician call out and around 4pm you find yourself with 10-20 past due in each que. You immediately think about the metrics and how you need to get caught up as fast as possible. Keep in mind, it’s a numbers game. 60 past due scripts out of 1500 is not going to ruin your weekly numbers, it will decrease them, but not ruin them. I have made the mistake of trying to type, count then verify one script at time to keep things from going past due and that’s the worst thing you can do. Efficiency is lost when you change tasks. This means that the best way to get caught up is to focus on one que at a time and don’t waste time changing tasks. You also don’t want your technicians to panic. In my experience when you panic, your tech panics and when your tech panics, the customers get treated poorly. Even though they probably deserve it, you have to keep them happy.

5. Lean on your technicians. No they didn’t go to pharmacy school, but they have been working in a pharmacy (and specifically, for CVS) for much longer than you. Don’t be afraid to ask questions when you don’t know how to do something. I know CVS drills into your head that you need to appear to be all-knowing and never appear weak to your technicians but this is not reality, not when you first start. If you work hard they will respect you and work hard for you no matter how incompetent you seem at first. If you need help with a pharmacist task, call other stores in your district. Before I even started as a pharmacist I was on first name basis with 5-6 pharmacists in the district that I had met through various training exercises. Remember their names and their store numbers and they can help you a great deal.

6. Tips for each station. Some of these are “best practices” simply because they make sense and they work, others are things I’ve just figured out with trial and error.

Triage (QT):

-Triage is most important to keep caught up/ahead because after a script leaves triage, it goes to QP, then QV. For this reason backups in triage will punish you more than any other que.

-Try to clean it out in the morning before you open. This won’t be possible at busy stores or until you can handle all the rejections by yourself, but it helps a great deal

- If you can’t handle rejections work out of (QD) and just type e-scripts. Utilize the “1P” feature of RX connect. If you are unsure of package size for inhalers, fridge stuff and patches then the typing “1P” in the quantity box will solve most of your problems. There are exceptions but you’ll learn them.

- When grabbing scripts at drop you need a routine (especially for CIIs) to make sure you get all the right info before the person leaves. I know CVS wants you to type while they stand there, but most people make a paper airplane out of the thing and just fly to you as they walk out. I usually ask “Have we filled for you before?” give the RX a once over. Make sure you see everything you need to fill it (DOB, quantity, and DEA are the most frequent missing). Lastly if it’s a CII, as you pull up their profile to see if “we’ve filled for them before”, check the date it was last filled. There’s nothing worse than doing all the work to fill a CII only to realize it’s too soon when you verify it.

Production (QP):

- Don’t accuracy scan something until you’re sure you have enough to complete the fill. If you know you don’t have enough to complete the fill, you can easily add it to order from the production que. However, if you complete the accuracy scan and THEN realize you don’t have enough pills, it takes a few extra steps to add it to the order. Not a big deal, but still something to keep in mind.

Verification (QV):

- Pay attention to “Fill number” when verifying. If a script has been filled at least twice before (you will see “fill 02” in top left corner of the first verification page) then skip the first page of verification. There is no need to verify data entry for something the patient has already taken for 60 days. The ONLY thing you need to do is make sure the right drug was dispensed. This will save you tons of time when verifying refills. Verification should be the fastest step to filling and RX, don’t overcomplicate it.

- Hold your ground on controlled substances. Whatever you and your partner have decided on (most CVS will do 3 days early) is LAW. Don’t ever let people intimidate you. If it comes to it, blame the law. “ I’m sorry it’s federal law, if I fill this now and I am audited I can lose my license to practice”. Your customers don’t know any different and they don’t even know where to look to disprove you.

-There are options when filling controls early if you feel comfortable with it. If the patient hits you with the typical “I lost my RX, I’m going on vacation, I’m changing dose” story, then offer to call the MD to verify its ok to fill early. This will either corroborate their story, or scare them away if they’re trying to scam you. Either way, its lets them know that they don’t make the rules.


I know this is long but hopefully it helps you. Some of these lessons were hard learned for me and some of them are things I’ve just discovered in the last couple of weeks. You won’t get fired for bad metrics unless you are PIC (and probably not even then) so don’t sweat it. Good luck.

This will be more meaningful advice than any clinical course an Rx school has to offer. I heard some schools make you read EKG and do full body examinations (???), at least in Minnesota that's what takes place in a mandatory 5 credit course during P2 year.
 
Verification (QV):

- Pay attention to “Fill number” when verifying. If a script has been filled at least twice before (you will see “fill 02” in top left corner of the first verification page) then skip the first page of verification. There is no need to verify data entry for something the patient has already taken for 60 days. The ONLY thing you need to do is make sure the right drug was dispensed. This will save you tons of time when verifying refills. Verification should be the fastest step to filling and RX, don’t overcomplicate it.
.

Just one more thing to add.
Please check Pt's profile (F5) and make sure there is no regimen change from last refill.
If Pt was on omeprazole 20mg last month & he picked up pantoprazole 40mg 5 days ago, please don't ok refill for omeprazole Auto-refill.
I see this all the time.
 
2. Forget about the phone when it’s busy. Don’t ignore it all day like some chains (ahem, WAGS). But if you have 3 waiters, 4 people dropping off and 4 people picking up, with just you and 1 tech, guess who doesn’t get a survey and a chance to rate you poorly??? The customer on the phone. So just let that bad boy ring.

3. Work as fast as you SAFELY can. Obviously you won’t be fast at first, but within 1-2 months you’ll start to pick up the speed. The human brain is an incredible thing. Before you know it you will have the steps to typing an E-script memorized to the point that you will be entering key strokes and credentialing before you see the prompt. Even if it isn’t busy, the faster you get things done the better your life will be. The point is, the farther you are ahead, the less it’s gonna suck when you get slammed with CIIs, waiters, doctor calls ect. I feel like a lot of pharmacists work on things that are important within the next hour instead of considering workflow for the entire day.

4. Don’t Panic. CVS gets crazy and it gets worse if you panic. Say you have a technician call out and around 4pm you find yourself with 10-20 past due in each que. You immediately think about the metrics and how you need to get caught up as fast as possible. Keep in mind, it’s a numbers game. 60 past due scripts out of 1500 is not going to ruin your weekly numbers, it will decrease them, but not ruin them. I have made the mistake of trying to type, count then verify one script at time to keep things from going past due and that’s the worst thing you can do. Efficiency is lost when you change tasks. This means that the best way to get caught up is to focus on one que at a time and don’t waste time changing tasks. You also don’t want your technicians to panic. In my experience when you panic, your tech panics and when your tech panics, the customers get treated poorly. Even though they probably deserve it, you have to keep them happy.

All good advice. Applies to hospital pharmacy as well.
 
Hi, thank you for your tips. They’re very helpful!

I’m a new pharmacist starting within a couple days. Can you please give some advice of verifying controll substances, as well as hard stops and soft stops?

If the Rx has hard stops that I need to call doctor to verify, but couldn’t get reach of them, should I delete the Rx from QV, our Rx on hold, and call patient?
 
Hi,

This is good to know. What should I do when it happens? Should I delete the ready omeprazole out of QV?

I’m just licensed, very new to the system and haven’t known much.

Thank you.
 
So I graduated from pharmacy school last year and was recently hired to work with CVS most likely as a floater for at least a few months for now. I delayed applying to retail because of hearing about many complaints about working in the big retail chains (high stress, no breaks, less help so that they can profit more, etc). I am almost finished with my training (allowed only 40 hours) at CVS and expected to start on my own after that. I've been trying to learn as much as I can at the store but it is very hard because things happen so fast and I have really never been exposed to it. It is considered a medium volume store with a drive thru and I guess because of budget cuts and reduction in staff hours it can get pretty busy at times. Whenever I get stuck I'll ask for help because I don't want the customer to wait and because the metric will suffer. So someone will quickly solve whatever I get stuck and I didn't learn much. I even have a hard time typing up prescriptions that are not po (creams, ointments, neb,etc) because the med can come in vials, packets). I understand the general concepts of QT,QD,QP,QV. My only exposure to retail was thru my rotations and my experiences were pretty bad (mostly counting and getting and returning meds from the shelf).

So I am really concerned about working on my own soon since my training is almost done. I realize that many of the problems will first appear on the QT screen and the techs can usually work on it if I get stuck. So should I be concerned that there is still a lot about the workflow I don't understand and don't know how to process it or should I just try to focus on verifying and get good at that for now and hopefully I will understand the workflow better with time? I am really freaking out now and think that due to my incompetency and being slow I will get fired soon....

Have you survived CVS, OP? lol i'd be very surprised if you're still working for CVS...
 
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