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guest
06-06-2010, 12:56 PM
I went to get a bottle of Nasonex yesterday and had to wait an hour. An hour. So I wondered why exactly? Below is an article I found, but it still does not excuse such a wait time for 1 bottle of a prepackaged allergy inhaler. Saturday afternoon, store is dead, 4 employees in the pharmacy.

Any pharmacists or people with insight into the situation here?

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Pharmacy from a pharmacist’s point of view
clock July 6, 2008 05:27 by author fara

It seems like most patients have a hard time understanding why there is always a wait time at the pharmacy. After all, what is so complicated about putting a few tablets in a bottle, sticking a label on it, and then handing it to the patient? Furthermore, how could we ever make a mistake in filling the right medication? To patients, this should be an error free, speedy process.
Pharmacy Workflow:

At the time of taking the prescription from the patient, we double check the patient’s date of birth and phone number to make sure we are typing the prescription under the right patient, picked from our national database. We contact the doctor if the prescriptions are not legible, or if the dosage does not seem appropriate. We double check the typed prescription by the technician to correct any mistakes or typos. We contact insurance companies to resolve any coverage issues. We double check the color, the shape, and the NDC number (a unique number designated to each medication) of the medication to make sure the right medication with the right dose has been dispensed. Finally, we verify the patient’s address at the register to avoid giving the prescription to the wrong patient. Of course, all these preventative steps are done in the midst of answering the phones which are ringing nonstop, answering patients’ questions on their prescriptions or over the counter medications, or even questions like which isle has the shaving cream, or whether we carry Revlon eye make up remover.


Surprisingly, to the patients who are standing behind the counter, our job seems super easy. After all, what is so difficult about putting a bunch of pills in a bottle? Why is there always a wait? No body is in the waiting area any way. Why don’t we pick up the phone on time? Why don’t we know which vitamins are on sale? Why can’t we read the doctor’s hand writing? Why are we even questioning the dosage the doctor has picked on the prescription? After all he is a doctor who has been practicing for 15 years, and there is no way he would make a mistake. Being under so much pressure and bombarded with so many tasks at the same time, we still have to stay very focused and calm to avoid any mistakes.


The reality is mistakes do happen. No matter how careful we are, and how many different ways we implement to double check our work, we all still end up making some mistakes during our practice as a pharmacist. The key is to stay vigilant, focused and follow procedures. So, the next time you are picking up your prescription, remember the many checks and balances that goes into ensuring you get the right medication.

warlock
06-06-2010, 01:19 PM
I feel so sorry for them...

What a terrible task.

bigtavi8
06-06-2010, 07:05 PM
SHit feel like an ass now for asking what vitamins are on sale at shoppers.LOL. and then telling em i need my prescription in 30 mins all the time. Didnt realize they did all that stuff back there but hey ill try and be more patient i geuss.

guest
06-06-2010, 11:15 PM
so they have to answer the phone, double check their work and follow up on any discrepancies? sounds like a lot of jobs to me......where people make considerably less. however, i understand mistakes in their line can be catastrophic, responsibility and knowledge are key.

......but this brings me back to my computer printed nasonex prescription. nothing to double check, no one to call, a regular customer with a basic prescription - 1 hour to grab a box off the shelf and put a sticker on it. no one in line, no phones ringing, the place was a ghost town, parking lot empty......but maybe those 4 techs were swamped with previous scripts to fill? so is it then safe to say that if 4 more people came in with prescriptions after me, the fourth person would potentially be waiting 5 hours for their bottle of nasonex?

i dunno, seemed excessive to me even with all the factors considered.

Ritch
06-06-2010, 11:20 PM
Maybe they hope you stay and shop while you`re waiting to spend more money?

PdH
07-06-2010, 10:24 AM
I never have to wait more than 15 minutes at Shoppers, even when they are busy. Pretty good service IMO. :)

guest
07-06-2010, 07:55 PM
hmmm...it was at Shopper's, must have been an off day. i was wondering if maybe they just throw a mandatory wait time out there to somehow deal with addicts or the unruly?

O-Train
07-06-2010, 08:06 PM
A lot of people drop off prescriptions and pick up later. A lot of people phone in their perscriptions too...especially old people. Those are the only reasons I can think of.

rated_rko
07-06-2010, 11:30 PM
i was at rexall tonight took an hr to get my script filled too...i rather do the drop off pick up later method

RagingRandy
08-06-2010, 11:41 AM
I never have to wait more than 15 minutes at Shoppers, even when they are busy. Pretty good service IMO. :)

Same here. Never more than 15 minutes but it is a Rexall.