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What's the process that a pharmacist should take if a patient comes into a store and claims that he was shorted on controlled substance tablets?
What's the process that a pharmacist should take if a patient comes into a store and claims that he was shorted on controlled substance tablets?
We might give the benefit of the doubt once in a while unless its a CII, which we can just look at the inventory. If they say it again and again, we will put a note to count their pills at pick up. So we have to take a tray down there and count them out for them.... I'd be really embarrased, but the people dont seem to care.
I am an intern at a fairly busy store and I have been instructed by the pharmacist to always double count the CIIs, and i think he also counts them if its not busy. I miscounted a CII yesterday, my first and last time I hope. We laughed about it at the store because it was a rather stupid error. I laughed along but deep inside i was embarrased because It wasnt a big number of pills I had to count. If it wasnt for the pharmacist recounting the pills the patient would have had less pills and we at the pharmacy would have denied giving the patient less pills since they were 'double counted'. My point here is that double counting is a good practice but is not completely accurate if you are counting the wrong number of pills to begin with. I have learnt from this mistake and a few others i have made during the past month and a half I have been interning at a retail store. I try to move on keeping these mistakes in my head for when i actually become a pharmacist they will be the things I will have to watch out for.
It was a CIII, not CII. I dont let you count CII's🙂 Maybe in 3 years ill let you!I am an intern at a fairly busy store and I have been instructed by the pharmacist to always double count the CIIs, and i think he also counts them if its not busy. I miscounted a CII yesterday, my first and last time I hope. We laughed about it at the store because it was a rather stupid error. I laughed along but deep inside i was embarrased because It wasnt a big number of pills I had to count. If it wasnt for the pharmacist recounting the pills the patient would have had less pills and we at the pharmacy would have denied giving the patient less pills since they were 'double counted'. My point here is that double counting is a good practice but is not completely accurate if you are counting the wrong number of pills to begin with. I have learnt from this mistake and a few others i have made during the past month and a half I have been interning at a retail store. I try to move on keeping these mistakes in my head for when i actually become a pharmacist they will be the things I will have to watch out for.
I am an intern at a fairly busy store and I have been instructed by the pharmacist to always double count the CIIs, and i think he also counts them if its not busy. I miscounted a CII yesterday, my first and last time I hope. We laughed about it at the store because it was a rather stupid error. I laughed along but deep inside i was embarrased because It wasnt a big number of pills I had to count. If it wasnt for the pharmacist recounting the pills the patient would have had less pills and we at the pharmacy would have denied giving the patient less pills since they were 'double counted'. My point here is that double counting is a good practice but is not completely accurate if you are counting the wrong number of pills to begin with. I have learnt from this mistake and a few others i have made during the past month and a half I have been interning at a retail store. I try to move on keeping these mistakes in my head for when i actually become a pharmacist they will be the things I will have to watch out for.
Yeah..thats what I meant....was just checking if you were using the magnifying glass to read stuff on your screen....hahahahhahah...you are funny as hell man....have you shared that story here yet?
I am an intern at a fairly busy store and I have been instructed by the pharmacist to always double count the CIIs, and i think he also counts them if its not busy. I miscounted a CII yesterday, my first and last time I hope. We laughed about it at the store because it was a rather stupid error. I laughed along but deep inside i was embarrased because It wasnt a big number of pills I had to count. If it wasnt for the pharmacist recounting the pills the patient would have had less pills and we at the pharmacy would have denied giving the patient less pills since they were 'double counted'. My point here is that double counting is a good practice but is not completely accurate if you are counting the wrong number of pills to begin with. I have learnt from this mistake and a few others i have made during the past month and a half I have been interning at a retail store. I try to move on keeping these mistakes in my head for when i actually become a pharmacist they will be the things I will have to watch out for.
When I first started, I had a couple incidents where I double counted 30 instead of 60, because of the habit of counting out 30. what I did from then on (i was embarrased) was write out how many i counted x 2 on the sticker to put in the log. that way it was a double check for me + we could come back and see the sticker if it were questioned. It forced me to look at the quant more than just autocount and autocircle.
Have you ever had a store manager tell you to give the customer controls so they will stop complaining about being shorted? We had a store manager once tell the pharmacist to give 60 suboxone to someone because the customer picked up 30 at one CVS but had paid for 90, and that store still owed them for 60 tabs. Store manager just said give it to him.
You call the board or DEA, or whoever, SM is not a pharmacist. SM is a civilian and if he gave him the suboxone w/o the pharmacist consent, I would say goodbye that that SM. Suboxone is a controlled substance schedule III (I think) and that SM has absolutely no business being in a pharmacy to make decisions like that. I would have beat him down to a ...I mad just thinking of that. If the patient were shorted, the patient goes back to the pharmacy he originated from. Oh man, I would be in that SM face for a while. End of rant, gotta go to work...😡
PS I really do have a great relationship with my SM🙂
At Walgreens all store managers and assistants are trained and certified pharmacy techs. I've worked at three different Wags and I've never seen a store manager do anything in the pharmacy besides work the register. I'm sure that there are stores where the SM is all over the pharmacy's business and if I were the pharmacist I don't think I'd like that at all.
At Kroger our SM mostly handled pharmacy customer complaints. Which were usually about junk like:
"I am on passport (Medicaid) and I know that this coupon for a $25 gift card with new RX says 'not to be used for passport prescriptons' but I want my gift card anyway."
"I tried to return this used glucose testing meter and strips b/c I got blood all over them and they are dirty and I want another one. But that pharmacist said no."
"I'm a redneck and I don't like the 'looks' of that 'foreign' pharmacist. Ain't ya'll got no 'MERICAN druggists to hire?" 🙄
I totally agree with that.
SMs may be the greatest folks in the world, and do an incredible amount of work and are under a lot of pressure a lot of the time. But anyone could be an SM. Here's why:
I'd point to the wall and ask where their license is. When he/she's dumbfounded I would then say, 'that's why I can not just give a patient 60 tablets of one of the most highly controlled substances in pharmacy'.
I would have reservations about having such an SM in the pharmacy area after such a comment.
Technically, what are your thoughts on SMs being allowed back behind the pharmacy?
At Walgreens all store managers and assistants are trained and certified pharmacy techs. I've worked at three different Wags and I've never seen a store manager do anything in the pharmacy besides work the register. I'm sure that there are stores where the SM is all over the pharmacy's business and if I were the pharmacist I don't think I'd like that at all.
At Kroger our SM mostly handled pharmacy customer complaints. Which were usually about junk like:
"I am on passport (Medicaid) and I know that this coupon for a $25 gift card with new RX says 'not to be used for passport prescriptons' but I want my gift card anyway."
"I tried to return this used glucose testing meter and strips b/c I got blood all over them and they are dirty and I want another one. But that pharmacist said no."
"I'm a redneck and I don't like the 'looks' of that 'foreign' pharmacist. Ain't ya'll got no 'MERICAN druggists to hire?" 🙄
At Walgreens all store managers and assistants are trained and certified pharmacy techs. I've worked at three different Wags and I've never seen a store manager do anything in the pharmacy besides work the register. I'm sure that there are stores where the SM is all over the pharmacy's business and if I were the pharmacist I don't think I'd like that at all.
At Kroger our SM mostly handled pharmacy customer complaints. Which were usually about junk like:
"I am on passport (Medicaid) and I know that this coupon for a $25 gift card with new RX says 'not to be used for passport prescriptons' but I want my gift card anyway."
"I tried to return this used glucose testing meter and strips b/c I got blood all over them and they are dirty and I want another one. But that pharmacist said no."
"I'm a redneck and I don't like the 'looks' of that 'foreign' pharmacist. Ain't ya'll got no 'MERICAN druggists to hire?" 🙄