Rite Aid Failure

When will big retail pharmacy chains learn? Rite Aid deserves a slap on the wrist for what it has promised potential customers.

Really Rite-Aid? Really? You've stooped to an all new low trying to compete with CVS and Walgreens. Yes there are reasons that won't qualify a patient for the $5 reward for the pharmacist not complying... but guess who gets to explain to every patient the rules? That's right! Your employee. Way to make working for Rite-Aid to be the worst possible retail company to work for.

Stock is worth less than $1.50.

Instead of making your employees hate you Rite-Aid, how about coming up with something not so dangerous?

I suppose Rite-Aid is imagining most stores do less than 200 rxs/day. Are they hiring more pharmacists to help meet this demand? What steps are put into place to ensure this is something a pharmacist can do SAFELY. So a company whose shareholders have stock at $1.00 a share wants to give away more of their money when the RULE isn't met?

RITE-AID YOU FAIL. You fail on every level. You fail on appearance, professionalism, and ethics.

It won't be long though and Rite-Aid will be off the street for good.

This is Rite-Aid's hail mary pass.

Some pharmacists give us all a bad name...

There's nothing worse that grates under my skin as a pharmacist than to drive to a retail pharmacy and find a pharmacist digging in the trenches with a sourpuss expression and basically giving us ALL a bad name.  We're not ALL miserable. Here's a post about waking a retail pharmacist up only to find out she had the wrong drug.

Not that we cannot make mistakes... but please.

Why Does it Take So Long to Fill My Prescription?

The age old question that used to make my toes curl...  why does it take so long to fill my prescription?  If you search around the net, you'll find non medical people discussing, and it's hilarious: Why does it take so long to refill my prescription?  I went there yesterday and it took them 2 hours to refill my medicine.  I wanted to call the manager to complain but thought I'd ask here first.

Yahoo's best answer voted (not kidding):  If they did it in 2 minutes, you wouldn't value them as much. You'd think that they were just technicians putting pills in a bottle.

They have to make you wait to preserve the mystique.

Yeah, that's it baby.  We need more value?  We love mystique.

Basically the bottom line is that there are hundreds ahead of you!

Is It That Bad?

A potential pharmacist student commented on my blog here asking me if pharmacy was really that bad... he said he was reading blogs about the medical profession and all we do is gripe and complain. Got me to thinking this early morning about that question... "Is it that bad?" For me, no way it's not that bad or I would have already gone back to school to do something else. I believe it's human nature to complain some and especially to complain anonymously. Things about pharmacy that I have loved... This is a list probably needed to be completed to tell you guys and gals the GOOD stuff.

1. If you loved science and you loved biology in high school and college then pharmacy could be the career for you. Not only did I have the opportunity to learn about chemicals, etc..., but I learned the various ways they are changed, metabolized, and excreted by the human body. Not only that, but the different ways they can be broken down by DIFFERENT human bodies - some with renal issues, some with hepatic issues, etc... Everyone can be truly different. Drugs can react differently. I found this one single point of pharmacy to be quite fascinating.

2. If you want to graduate in 6-8 years and start out making six figures (potentially) this may be the job for you. I found in 1999 when I graduated that I was making close to six figures, but a lot of the older pharmacists were really ill about the new guys on the block because they knew we were making the exact same pay. It wasn't pay based on performance but LICENSURE. For the new guy, this is great; for the old guy, it can be disheartening to think that little youngin' next to you is bringing home the same bucks. I'm almost 10 years out of pharmacy school now (unbelievable time flies!) and it STILL DOES NOT BOTHER ME. I don't get wrapped up in petty stuff, and I figure if you really want a dollar more per hour, you could have negotiated up front. BE A SHARK when you negotiate - ASK FOR THE IMPOSSIBLE. If you do not ask, you will NOT RECEIVE. Vacation... they say we'll give you 3 weeks. Tell them that you want 4 weeks. Go up on pay by at least 5-10K per year. Why not? They want you and they will negotiate just like if you are selling a house.

3. Options other than retail. When I tell people I'm a "pharmacist," the majority think retail. What is great about pharmacy is that there are MANY MANY options in different jobs. Of course coming out of school, retail is the most lucrative in pay, but over time other positions can be just as tasty. There are the hospital pharmacists (me), the home infusion pharmacists, the nuclear pharmacists, the retail pharmacists, the professors in a pharmacy school, the long-term care pharmacist, the consultant pharmacist, and the specialty pharmacists within other settings. You can do a residency, make yourself a little different than Joe PharmD next to you, and land a Critical Care Specialty Pharmacist position at a big city hospital, make rounds with a physician that actually respects you if you know your shit and drink Starbucks coffee everyday leaving for home at 5pm like the rest with bankers' hours. The CHOICES ARE ENDLESS really.

I've been out of school, like I said, for 10 years almost. I have tried retail, home infusion, long-term care, and hospital. I love little bits of all of them... but I find hospital to be the most comfortable for me.

I would never tell someone to NOT pursue pharmacy. It's a great career for anyone... BUT you will find some complaining out there... even from me.

Blogs have to be funny after all, right?

What advice I would give students graduating from pharmacy school

Seems others are doing the same, so I'll put in my 2 cents. 1.  Don't assume that all of pharmacy is retail.  Yes, you will make the most bucks in retail and if you have gone the way of borrowing your way into a huge hole, then it may be your only way to make it out and then find something else.  Perhaps retail is your goal, and you love it, but personally, I found 3 years of retail to be enough pharmacy prostituting that I could do.  The bucks WERE nice, but the abuse to my body from standing 14 hours a day, lack of bathroom breaks, treatment from STORE managers who have barely any sort of education, abuse from patients, and abuse from non-caring technicians, I look back now and say RUN -- no I SCREAM RUN!  There are some great jobs out there that don't involve retail at all.

2.  If you DO choose retail know that the longer you stay IN retail, the less likely you'll ever get out.  It's like getting hooked on a drug.  You keep doing it saying you'll quit, but by the time you are ready to leave, it's almost too late, unless you are lucky and some poor sweet manager in a different realm of pharmacy sees the pain you have experienced and wants to throw you a lifeline.  I had one of those - a female pharmacist that I am forever indebted to.... thanks J!

3.  Make pharmacy a hobby somehow.  Read and read and read.  The only difference between you and the girl (since girls are taking over ;)) standing next to you is that you somehow have made yourself marketable... you are reading publications and keeping up.  You are giving a rats ass about pharmacy and all the crap going on...  You know how to find anything FAST...  you can think on your toes.  Who care what you made in Biochem.  No one cares.  But do you know the difference between using Primaxin/Fortaz vs. Tygacil in different situations?  Can you think critically?

My top advice... DO NOT GO INTO RETAIL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!