Comments about working from home pharmacy

I have received quite a few comments about this particular niche within pharmacy - working from home.  I don't really have a lot of information to share about how to find a setup like this, but to research and ask in your local area.  There are still laws to consider, crossing state lines, etc...  and other things that individual companies have to explore with their legal department(s), etc... but in my case, this started up I believe a few years ago as a pilot program.  It's still not very large and still could collapse I believe... nothing is for sure. I do know that a company that owns Acc.redo is using at home pharmacists, and I heard rumors that Walgr.eens was as well.  No confirmation from anyone on that yet.

Network network network.  It's the only way to find those specialty jobs.  They just don't fall in your lap, I can say.

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!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Universal Healthcare

This is what bothers me. Friends of mine who are FOR this type of system to be rolled out into America... it's what both Democratic candidates talk about, and it's the talk among healthcare professionals. I will admit that most of the time I sit there and say nothing. The reason is that I've done no research besides hearing the media (a.k.a. "America's Brain") describe that we need this... Here's is my attempt to find some truth in what is REALLY going on in countries that have this sort of healthcare system.

One of the biggest complaints about Universal Healthcare is the wait times. Whether for a specialist, major elective surgery, or specialized treatments, studies by the Commonwealth Fund found that 57% of Canadians reported waiting 4 weeks or more to see a specialist; 24% of Canadians waited 4 hours or more in the emergency room. (Commonwealth Fund, Mirror, Mirror on the Wall: An International update on the comparative performance of American health care, Karen Davis et al., May 15, 2007.)

OK, given there are wait times. The last trip to the ER I had personally, I waited 2 hours. There was no one else there waiting, so I assume with a busy ER after hours, I would have had to wait more than 4 hours. This seems comparable. As far as waiting to see a specialist... 4 weeks seems plausible unless it's a life or death situation as cancer treatment, etc...

It seems plausible also that part of conversion to this sort of system would have to include dealing with wait times and ways to overcome this scrutiny. No one wants to wait.

Another criticism is the lower number of physicians practicing in these countries. Because their pay is lower, many come to America where salaries skyrocket. Would this affect pharmacists as well? Would our six figure salaries go away? What is the incentive to stay in a system as this when pay is equal, say to a teacher? Is this because of what we perceive as worth in the job market and education or should we be making less?

Would I still be allowed to purchase my own privately held healthcare insurance? In Canada - No... it is illegal. The New York Times stated, "Accepting money from patients for operations they would otherwise receive free of charge in a public hospital is technically prohibited in this country, even in cases where patients would wait months or even years before receiving treatment...Canada remains the only industrialized country that outlaws privately financed purchases of core medical services."

Interestingly enough, Canada has a higher life expectancy than the US.

The debate continues.

Home meds in a hospital

One of the most frustrating things about the job I have now (and there are NOT as many frustrating things as in retail, etc..., I can tell you that!) is that when a patient is admitted into the hospital, he/she has a list of all the meds they take at home.  This list can be quite long and cumbersome...  and the most annoying thing is the doctor will sign off on it without even taking a peek that one line says, "hydromorphone 2mg prn."  PRN as needed... every second would fall here.  Or "acetaminophen prn"  OK.  There is a limit our livers can handle per 24 hours.  The doctor does not care for the most part.  He's there to take care of what ails him/her now and not the continuation of medications or reteaching of something they are taking incorrectly that may have precipitated the entire hospital visit (or at least exacerbated it!). The list can include anything... meds made up, meds misspelled so badly you can tell if it's hydralazine or hydroxyzine...

Meds are meds regardless if they come from home or the hospital.

Another one bites the dust... (almost)

I have a dear friend in pharmacy that moved into retail solely because his job at X Company (long-term care) was eliminated.  I personally left the job prior to the massive overhauling of layoffs that ended up leaving a staff of twenty pharmacists to about 2 full-time and a couple of part-time pharmacists.  Sad, really.  It was such a great company at one time...  tons of cubicles where there all sorts of different things to do from the front-end work to the back-end work of shipping the meds to different places.  This dear friend of mine is in his 60s now and was let go as the others and joined up with a chain store.  I talked to him recently.  He's already ready to quit after just 6-8 months.  You see, this chain company had him in a brand new store down in his home town.  That same chain drug store posted signs out front that stated:

"Your prescription filled in 15 minutes or less"

Can you believe that?  So over time, customers came, dropping off their prescriptions while complaining about the Walgreens down the road where they had to wait a whole hour to three hours for their medications.  Over time that same pharmacist saw the business grow and grow to a point where more help was needed.

Guess what?  No help is hired.

So now my dear pharmacist friend is on a month long trip to a tropical place while he told his boss that 14 hour days were not for him nor was not having a lunch.  He told them he'd be back in a month and when he came back may not stay there.  They are so desperate enough that they are sitting and waiting on his return.

Minnesota health system purges drug trinkets

By STEVE KARNOWSKI, Associated Press WriterSat Jan 19, 6:42 AM ET

When a Duluth-based operator of hospitals and clinics purged the pens, notepads, coffee mugs and other promotional trinkets drug companies had given its doctors over the years, it took 20 shopping carts to haul the loot away.

The operator, SMDC Health System, intends to ship the 18,718 items to the west African nation of Cameroon.

The purge underscored SMDC's decision to join the growing movement to ban gifts to doctors from drug companies.

SMDC scoured its four hospitals and 17 clinics across northeastern Minnesota and northwestern Wisconsin for clipboards, clocks, mouse pads, stuffed animals and other items decorated with logos for such drugs as Nexium, Vytorin and Lipitor.

Trinkets, free samples, free food and drinks, free trips and other gifts have pervaded the medical profession, but observers say that's starting to change.

"We just decided for a lot of reasons we didn't want to do that any longer," Dr. Kenneth Irons, chief of community clinics for SMDC, said Friday.

So SMDC put together a comprehensive conflict-of-interest policy that, among other things, limits access to its clinics by drug company representatives. Employees suggested the "Clean Sweep" trinket roundup, Irons said.

Ken Johnson, a spokesman for the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, had heard of hospitals and clinics banning promotional items before, but said SDMC's purge was unprecedented.

"I've never seen nor heard of a systematic roundup of pens and coffee mugs before," Johnson said. "It's a bit draconian. But the onus is on us now to do a better job of explaining the job and the importance of marketing representatives. Unfortunately there are a lot of cynics in America who want to think the worst."

SDMC's effort was motivated by a desire to show patients that its 450 doctors were serious about keeping prescription drug costs down and making unbiased medical decisions, Irons said.

The backlash against the cozy relationships between doctors and drug makers gained steam from article in the Journal of the American Medical Association in 2006. It said research had shown that even cheap gifts, such as pens, can affect doctors' prescribing decisions.

The Prescription Project, funded by the Pew Charitable Trusts, was founded to promote the JAMA article's recommendations for countering aggressive marketing to physicians by the pharmaceutical and medical device industries.

Marcia Hams, assistant director of the project, said she too hadn't heard of a roundup like SDMC's, but hopes other health organizations follow its lead.

"This seems like a pretty aggressive way to kick off a policy like that," she said. "It sends an important message, I think, for how a strict policy can be implemented in an effective way."

Kaiser Permanente, the country's largest HMO, Veterans Affairs hospitals and medical centers at several universities have recently adopted strict conflict-of-interest policies, such as gift bans, Hams said.

Many of SMDC's items will be going to the health system of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Cameroon, which has three hospitals, and several rural health centers.

Irons said there shouldn't be a conflict of interest in Cameroon because the advertised drugs aren't available there.

___

On the Net:

SMDC Health System: http://www.smdc.org

The Prescription Project: http://www.prescriptionproject.org

Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America: http://www.phrma.org

About time someone did something good with all the crap that drug reps use to talk physicians into the latest and greatest drug they are peddling.

Baseball and steroids

I don't know if Roger Clemens is guilty or not of using steroids.  If you look at old clips of him pitching the years that the Mitchell reports claims, maybe he looks puffier?  I don't know.  Part of me feels bad for the guy because wonder if he is INNOCENT?  Either way, it seems to me that steroids are NOT going to just go away.  HGH and steroids can make an athlete stronger and younger which equals more money. I just got a kick out of the interview with Clemens because he was talking about how he was taking Vioxx like "eating Skittles."  Are you serious?  Are you kidding me?  He then went on to discuss how if he did go before a senate hearing committee, that he would have to bring up the Vioxx question...  why was this drug on the market if it had the potential to harm?

Does he and the rest of the pill popping Americans not KNOW that every drug has some potential (some more than others) to harm?  You can KILL yourself with an overdose on acetaminophen just as one example.

It's just that I'm surprised he was eating Vioxx like candy with very specific dosing limits spelled out, etc...

They all want to be smart and in the know when on their meds but then later when the med is taken off the market, they want to play the dumb card.  For Roger, the dumb card would be not to find out the max daily dose of Vioxx prior to taking it?  Perhaps?  I mean eating Vioxx like candy means more than 1-2 day obviously!

Live Claritin Clear

And have silicosis. The reason I write this is that there is a commercial on TV right now featuring the wonderdrug Claritin. This commercial features a sculptor of some sort banging on a statue and makes the comment that if "he were to sneeze, he might take the statue's nose off."  (It's important not to sneeze) The funny thing is that the man is wearing no form of ventilation protection and silica is flying around everywhere.  He's inhaling it.  It's dusty in the air.

I think he should worry about bigger things -- like Silicosis:

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

ICD-10 J62.
ICD-9 502

Silicosis (also known as Grinder's disease and Potter's rot) is a form of occupational lung disease caused by inhalation of crystalline silica dust, and is marked by inflammation and scarring in forms of nodular lesions in the upper lobes of the lungs.

Silicosis (especially the acute form) is characterized by shortness of breath, fever, and cyanosis (bluish skin). It may often be misdiagnosed as pulmonary edema (fluid in the lungs), pneumonia, or tuberculosis.

This respiratory disease was first recognized in 1705 by Ramazzini who noticed sand-like substances in the lungs of stonecutters. The name silicosis (from the Latin silex or flint) was attributed to Visconti in 1870.

The full name for this disease when caused by the specific exposure to fine silica dust found in volcanoes is pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis, and at 45 letters it is the longest word in any of the major English dictionaries. (The name has been described as a "trophy word"—its only job is to serve as the longest word.[1])

Once again proving that Schering Corporation didn't think about this or ask ANYONE before airing this incredibly stupid commercial.

Can someone PLEASE let them know?

Night Shift Pharmacists

Looks like working the night shift is carcinogenic.  Can't you hear it now?  The lawyers on TV asking, "Have you been working the graveyard shift for such-and-such years?  It's not called graveyard for nothing!  Call 555-5555 and file your claim today against your company!" Article here and here.

Handwriting

I wish there was a way to fine doctors for poor handwriting.  Seriously.  I have found that it's very difficult to read a couple of doctors handwriting.  It almost looks like they expect me to just be able to read their minds!  I found an article -- Aug. 4, 2000 -- Teresa Vasquez's husband, Ramon, died because a pharmacist could not read his doctor's handwriting.

The mistake was stunningly simple: In 1995 Vasquez saw cardiologist Ramachandra Kolluru, who wrote out a prescription for the angina drug, Isordil, to be taken four times a day in doses of 20 milligrams. But to the pharmacist on duty at Albertson's pharmacy in Odessa, Texas, the doctor's scrawl looked like Plendil, a blood pressure medication with a maximum daily dose of 10 milligrams.

The pharmacist filled the prescription with Plendil but attached directions with the dosage for Isordil. As a result, Vasquez not only got the wrong drug, but he was directed to take it at eight times the maximum daily dosage, according to court documents. He took it several times, each time complaining to his wife about how poorly it made him feel. The day after he began taking it, Vasquez suffered a massive heart attack. He died several days later, leaving his wife and three teenage children.

Experts say such mistakes are frighteningly common, though no accurate numbers are available. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has estimated that as many as 1.3 million Americans are injured each year due to medication errors, such as getting the wrong dose or the wrong drug. A Feb. 28, 1998, report in the British medical journal, Lancet, estimated that between 1983 and 1993, the number of deaths caused by drug errors in the United States jumped 250% to more than 7,000 a year. How many of these deaths and injuries are due to name confusion? That's not clear -- though the U.S. Pharmacopeia, an industry trade group, estimates that about one-quarter of the 1,500 errors reported to its hot line each year involve mix-ups due to drug names that look or sound alike.

"It's a significant problem and it's vastly underreported," says Jerry Phillips, the FDA's associate director for medication error prevention.

One reason for the increase in medication mix-ups is the sheer number of drugs on the market. Bruce Lambert, an assistant professor of pharmacy administration at the University of Illinois at Chicago, says there are 100,000 potential pairings of drug names that could be confused. And with around 100 new drugs coming onto the market each year, the potential for mistakes keeps growing.

Among the fatal mix-ups reported to the FDA in the past few years:

  • Narcan, used to reverse an overdose of narcotics, and Norcuron, a muscle relaxant used to intubate patients.
  • Pitressin, a synthetic hormone sometimes used to control bleeding in the esophagus, and Pitocin, used to induce labor in pregnant women.
  • Amiodarone, an anti-arrythmic, and Amrinone, used in congestive heart failure.
  • Demerol and Roxanol -- both are narcotic analgesics, but Roxanol is more potent than Demerol.

Even drugs with names as seemingly dissimilar as Coumadin and Avandia can be confused -- if a doctor's handwriting is bad enough.

Deaths from such medication mix-ups represent just a fraction of the errors. More common is the story of Jimmie Anderson, 55, of Berkeley, Calif. To control his high blood pressure, Anderson has been taking Norvasc for many years. But three years ago, when he filled his prescription, he fell victim to one of the most common and serious mix-ups: He got the anti-psychotic Navane instead of Norvasc.

For four weeks, Anderson took the wrong medication, failing to connect his deteriorating health to the pills he thought should be helping. The first thing he noticed was his fatigue, then he felt his jaw lock up. Soon he started feeling restless. "I was walking the walls, pacing around my house," he says. "I couldn't sleep at all. It got so bad I thought I was dying."

What may have saved his life was a visit from a friend who also took Norvasc and told Anderson he had the wrong drug. The experience changed Anderson's approach to taking medicine and dealing with pharmacists. "Now I make sure I look at all my medications," he says. "And I read them to make sure they're right."

What can be done to prevent these errors?

Pharmaceutical companies spend a lot of money selecting and test-marketing drug names. But some experts say the companies pay far less attention to making sure names won't be confused. "When a new name is being considered, it should be tested systematically for error prevention," says Michael Cohen, a pharmacist and president of the nonprofit Institute for Safe Medication Practices.

Potential names could be screened by a panel of pharmacists, doctors, and nurses, Cohen says. The names could be run through a computer program, such as the one developed by Lambert, to identify look-alike or sound-alike names. "Unfortunately," Cohen says, "the vast majority of companies don't do that. So the FDA should require it."

One example he cites of good intentions gone awry is the case of Celebrex, a popular arthritis drug that has earned the dubious distinction of having 115 mix-ups reported to the FDA. The drug was originally to be called Celebra. But drug maker Searle changed the name at the urging of the FDA, to avoid confusion with the antidepressant, Celexa. In Cohen's view, though, the new name was not much safer. In fact, he predicted exactly what happened: that Celebrex would still be confused with Celexa, and would also be mistaken with Cerebyx, an anti-seizure medication. He pushed unsuccessfully for another change. To him, the errors that have occurred were both predictable and preventable; he continues to feel the name should be changed. "I hope we don't have to wait until someone dies," he says.

Searle spokesman Mark Gleason says there are no current plans to change the name, but the company is working hard to alert doctors, pharmacists, and consumers to the problem. Last year, he says, the company sent out a "Dear Colleague" letter to pharmacists warning them of the potential for mix-ups. Gleason defends the company's decision to go with the name Celebrex despite the warnings of problems. "This was mutually agreed on with the FDA," he says. "There are 15,000 prescription drugs on the market, so it's challenging getting brand names that aren't like other brand names. You give it your best shot. But there's a lot of potential for human error."

This potential for error has increased along with the workloads of both doctors and pharmacists. "Doctors are seeing more patients than ever and pharmacists are under the gun too," says Cohen.

Jim O'Donnell, an associate professor of pharmacy at Rush Medical College in Chicago, points out that changes in the pharmacy industry -- the decline of mom-and-pop drug stores, the increasing volume of prescriptions handled by pharmacy chains, and the growing use of poorly trained pharmacy technicians -- have also set the stage for more errors. "The policy of some chains is that you must fill a prescription within 20 minutes," he says.

Technology may provide some solutions: Dispensing software used by pharmacies could be loaded with special alerts that flash on the screen whenever a drug with the potential to be confused is being filled. On the other end of the prescribing chain, doctors could use computers to write prescriptions; when this approach has been tried in hospitals, errors have declined substantially. A simpler solution would be for doctors to type or print prescriptions and to note on prescription forms the reason for drugs being ordered.

In the end, it may be the threat of litigation that makes drug companies, pharmacies, and doctors pay more attention to the problem. Last year, a Texas jury ordered Albertson's Pharmacy and Dr. Kolluru to pay $450,000 to Ramon Vasquez's widow, Teresa, and her children.

Experts say it was the first time a doctor was ever found to be negligent solely because of bad handwriting.


Rob Waters is a senior editor at WebMD. Krystina Sibley provided research assistance for this report.