My hometown still has 2 Mom and Pop pharmacies that allow the ekderly and disabled to run tabs on their meds. It's going to be a sad day when they finally shut down.
This just sounds like a manager has a metric of “all prescriptions must be ready in x minutes” and it is easier for the pharmacist to just click “it’s ready” before the alarm goes off.
I don’t understand how it can possibly take 2 hours to count a couple dozen pills, throw them in an orange tube, and slap a label on it. Maybe a pharmacy tech can enlighten me here.
Beyond that systemic problem that adds delay, actually dispensing the prescription is not the rate limiting step. When you get a prescription there's a whole list of things you need to do before it can be dispensed. In no particular order:
Select the right drug which seems easy but the prescriber may have used an old brand name, or misspelled it, or put in something that doesn't exist.
Calculate days supply (easy for pills, not so much for insulin, creams, eye drops, etc.)
Find the correct doctor in the system
Find the right patient's profile and see if they really fill at your store
Transcribe the directions in a way that makes sense in less than ~200 characters to fit on the bottle.
Check to see if the patient already has another prescription on file they are in the middle of the refills for so you don't have two active prescriptions.
Check to see the prescription has all the required information on it to be filled based on state requirements
Send the finalized prescription to the patient's insurance which inevitably is rejected because of some minor issue with any of the above, or it is expired, or requires prior authorization, or they changed their name, or it is too soon, or it's not the proper moon phase.
Actually fill the prescription which requires finding it on the shelf which is a mess because you fill ~500 prescriptions a day
Scan the bottle to make sure it's the same as what you billed the insurance, but if you picked the wrong generic brand on the first step you get to start over.
Clean the counting tray
Count the pills
Get the right vial and label everything with the stickers, and if you need more you need to print more out but someone else has a 50 page print job ahead of you and it's out of labels
Answer the phone
Answer the drive through
Answer the patient at consultation
Answer the patient at the cash register
Send it to the pharmacist for review which is a huge process on it's own which requires looking for interactions, appropriate dosage, correct drug for the disease indication, and simply reviewing you got everything transcribed correctly which if it isn't you get to start all over. Plus there are 50-100 prescriptions already waiting for review.
Process a vaccination patient
Add water to a reconstitutable (powder) medication
If Poseidon wills it, the prescription is approved and then you get to bag it, then put it in the right spot in the bins so it can be found.
If it's a controlled substance you need the pharmacist to do about 50% of the steps above and access the safe which is a whole process. In the meantime they are on the phone with a doctor or some insurance trying to get something clarified or approved. Or compounding someone's diaper cream. Or doing vaccinations. Or counseling someone on their antibiotic. Some drugs have mandatory monitoring programs you have to enter information from the doctor before they can be dispensed. Some drugs require a dosage syringe, or intramuscular syringes, or needle tips.
All the other people who have ordered meds before you. Also where you told a two hour wait time in person? That's a little suspect if it's not a huge order. I worked a very busy pharmacy, and if you are waiting in store we rarely had to ask more than a half hour. In fact a half hour is rare, but a rush when we are short handed....
But if you call ahead or order online, that yea you are just in the line of a few hundred people who needs rxs filled.
I can’t understand that you guys are at an (probably minimum wage) employee’s mercy to put the right pills into the right container to get the drugs you actually need and not something that kills you.
In Germany virtually all medications are brought to the pharmacy pre-packaged and (as of this year) stamped with a batch number on the outside and on each inner container, so you can be absolutely sure what’s inside really is what it says on the outside.
I mean, filling the tubes could be done so much faster and securely by a machine.
Or they try to refill prescriptions that aren't supposed to be. I got a call from them saying they had contacted my doctor and she wouldn't let them refill my short term antibiotics, so I should call and fix that so they can give me more that I don't need.
I call in a refill on my prescription. It takes them 4 years to fill it. Then they text me every five seconds for the next three days until I pick it up, threatening to throw it into the fires of Mordor if I forget.
My personal favorite was my insurance at my last job had my prescription coverage managed by CVS caremark. I have a few prescriptions I probably need to take the rest of my life, and after the initial fill at my local pharmacy, they would refuse to cover it unless I had my doctor resend the script to their mail-order service, and had the gall to claim it was for my convenience. Some of said medication is controlled such that I can only refill it within a few days of my current fill running out, bud will conveniently also cause some rather unpleasant withdrawals if I miss a couple of doses. So, "for my convenience," rather than calling in a refill and walking the two blocks to my local pharmacy, which has my refill ready in 30 minutes for me literally every time, I had to send it off to CVS. Then hope they filled it quick enough and there weren't any Sundays or holidays to mess with it.
The facility itself might even be open on Sunday, I'm not sure, but they would mail it via USPS, which doesn't deliver on Sunday unless you pay extra for it, and Caremark most certainly did not pay the extra for me.
American drugstore. They sell over the counter medication, blood pressure cuffs, miscellaneous diabetes gizmos, wrist braces etc. Most locations have a built in pharmacy.
Meanwhile fuck shoppers drug Mart auto fill. They do it automatically without permission and fill it too early so you wind up with a stockpile of expiring drugs