Friday, December 17, 2010

Are You Still A Pharmacist?


When I tell people I am a pharmacist many people picture me working behind the counter of a local retail pharmacy working at a computer station while on the phone and maybe counting pills too. Some people consider this to be a cushy job. Retail pharmacy has no real physical demands and a good salary. Heck, another health care professional writes a prescription and the pharmacist reads it and fills it.

This perception is partially true but there is much more to it.

Many patients don't fully understand the amount of interactions that pharmacists perform on a daily basis. I counted myself how many interactions I made in one 40 hour work week, there are as follows: 22 refill too soon interactions (10 were due to patients wanting controlled medications early and 12 due to patients getting refills on medications they did not know how to take properly), 26 drug changes (10 due to drug interactions that could result in serious side effects, 10 due to cost concerns for the patient and 6 to provide more optimal drug therapy) and 11 prescriptions where changed due to dosage/frequency concerns.

These changes did not include issues that insurance companies prompted me to correct. These where changes I made as a pharmacist. These where changes that helped improve health care for my patients.

With all of this contact amongst other professionals including mostly physicians and nurses you would think they would realize what retail pharmacists can do? Realize the importance of having that final set of knowledge, training and eyes brings to the table, right?

Many of them do, then there are stories like this...

My intern came to work one as usual since he is now a a month break in between rotations. After I got done explaining to a nurse why the physician needed to switch medications for a patient, I hung up the phone, turned to my intern and said, "Sometimes I am amazed and that I have to explain myself in such detail to other people in health care."

The intern looks and me and says, "Well, on my last rotation I told a nurse I wanted to do retail. She then asked me if I'd still be a pharmacist. I explained to her yes I would still be a pharmacist, I'd fill prescriptions and make drug interactions and give patients their medications while counseling them too. She didn't get what retail pharmacists do. She honestly thought we just threw pills into a bottle and that was it. She didn't get why I needed a doctorate to dispense medication. She had no idea what pharmacists do or that we actually did anything. I got kinda mad at her and no matter what I said she just had this close minded idea about pharmacists:"


I can almost see a construction worker thinking this. I can almost see a pastor thinking this. I can almost see the normal little old lady (an L.O.L.) thinking this.

I can NOT see a nurse thinking this!

How can another health care professional be so ignorant to what a whole class of medical professional does!

This is the equivalent to me talking to a nurse and saying, "I thought all you did was walk around in scrubs, jot down my blood pressure and gossip with other nurses in the hallway. Any knuckle-dragger can do that, right?"

Now before the nurses I know jump down my throat, I know all that you do. I know you usually double check even my work as a pharmacist, help physicians by describing what the patient has been up to and reacting to, all while taking care of the patients basic needs and address their many concerns. I know you do even more than that. Just like pharmacists do many little things that are in the best interests of their patients that are also too numerous to list.

Just today I had a patient who was very concerned about their mental health. He was a diagnosed manic-depressive who was on Zyprexa and Seroquel but has been getting more depressed recently. I asked him a few questions before getting out of him that he hadn't been on his prescribed Celexa as well. He mentioned that he must have forgot to get it refilled and when asking a few more questions it became apparent that his depression had been increasing for over 4 months, the same time frame he had been off his Celexa. I suggested he refill it then let myself and his physician know how he was doing in a month or so. He was more than thankful for my time and was certain that this would help. Now I can't say if it did or didn't help as it is too soon to tell but by explaining what I knew and understood this man was appreciative and understanding. What else could I do as a pharmacist?

This is why I make sure to do my best to fully explain to everyone what it is I am doing or did for them. This includes physicians, nurses and especially patients. The degree of explanation varies with who I am talking to but nonetheless I still explain. I feel this helps instill confidence in both myself and my profession. Every pharmacist should do the same to the best of their ability. It is part of the reason pharmacists were the #1 trusted profession for so many years. As the most accessible health care professional it is part of our duties. It is what will help patients and other professionals recognize the importance of our role and realize that we are not simply robots dispensing medications. We are needed professionals who bring a different perspective and knowledge base that can help ensure optimal medical treatments as well as keep costs down. Good pharmacists are always in need even if we are in retail we can still make a big difference, as much as any other health care professional. Without us patients wouldn't get their medications, there would be more medication errors and the health care system would be far worse than it is even now.

This is why I am a pharmacist!

1 comment:

  1. That's very true. Pharmacy as a field is essential to healthcare as a whole, and so it applies to pharmacists. After all, how can doctors dispense subscriptions if there's no one to make sure their medicines are properly handled? A pharmacists' medical expertise and the machines they use to check on the state of medicines they handle is indispensable for everyone's health.

    Dabrico, Inc.

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