Re: pharmacist shortage
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Re: pharmacist shortage
| James Pinkerton | 07 Oct 2003 16:09 |
> Viva la shortage. I prefer to think of it as a healthy market. > > I suppose there are not enough pharmacists for the chains to build a pharmacy on every block. Oh well, too bad for the chains. <snip>
> Shortages come and go. Say a prayer tonight to thank God for the shortage. Its the only job security you have, the pharmacists shortage.
I wonder when some mail order outfit is going to start shipping Rxs overseas to have them filled at lower cost and then sending them back to the States. Could they import Pharmacists and get them licensed in the USA? Hospitals have been recruiting nurses from overseas for quite a while. Too bad with the pharmacists shortage that we don't start demanding a 40 hour work week, better working conditions, closing for lunch, and a quota of Rxs for a pharmacist to fill in an eight hour shift.
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| P T | 06 Oct 2003 14:41 |
Viva la shortage. I prefer to think of it as a healthy market. I suppose there are not enough pharmacists for the chains to build a pharmacy on every block. Oh well, too bad for the chains.
At my employer, a ~400 bed hospital, since the start of the year, at least 7 pharmacists have been hired, (including me :-) but only about 3 have left. (The imbalance was to fill a need left by an expansion of RPh duties.) Anyway if we could hire a net of 4 RPh, maybe the shortage is not too severe.
I first became interested in pharmacy ~1992, and since than salaries have increased >100%. Nice. I was in retail, and couldn't handle it. I took several months off, and had no trouble finding employment when I was ready, and I'm 48. Nice. The next guy we hired had an identical story. Nice. Give me a shortage anyday.
There is one thing that worries me. My brother faced a larger shortage in his line of work in the late 90s. He was a main frame programmer. There was a mass influx of labor from overseas, and now, it's difficult at best for an "American" to find work in that field. But of course, that could never happen to us . . .
Shortages come and go. Say a prayer tonight to thank God for the shortage.
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| Aimee G | 06 Oct 2003 13:22 |
I am a retail pharmacist. It allows me to get full-time hours in the space of 3 days, so I can spent the majority of time home with my 2 kids (and wishing I were at work). I have a clinical degree and can easily slip into a position at the husband's place of work (big East Coast manufacturer). As tempting as it would be to have a pretty desk job with a huge salary and --get this-- a LUNCH BREAK! SICK DAYS!! (gasp!)... I love retail.
I love my customers. I love being right there when they need me for all their big and bitty questions and concerns. I get to see bellies grow big with new babies, and I get to see age erased from faces when a patient finally gets pain relief, and I get to hold hands with my customers when all that's needed to brighten someone's day is a simple human touch. I am fulfilled by my role as a retail pharmacist. I try hard to be a good person, and this is the place I get my best practice. I can see why some people don't last in retail-- if your heart isn't in it, if you aren't a people person, if you just don't give a rat's a.s for a stranger's problem, then you are going to be annoyed when customers come to you for compassionate care.
Ok, so it's not glamorous. The stuff I actually get paid to do-- repetitive counting, regulations out the wahzoo, calling petty third parties, explaining copays to pissy people, trying to explain that "Yes, there is an Aisle 6, it's right next to Aisle 5 but there is no sign"...the real work stinks sometimes. We are horribly understaffed-- I guess they budget their tech hours to the point when there are none on duty at some point every day and from 3-9 on Saturdays because it MAKES SENSE to some dope who probably has never even been in my store...ah, the Corporation Mentality...and sometimes I can't get to the other phone in time. But I have a great partner (still don't know how I got so lucky to work with her) and I like the front store staff and I have great customers. The mall has pretty good food and when I actually have a tech working with me, I get to eat. I go home some nights dog tired, and some hours are so busy that I pray out loud not to screw up something. But I love my job because the good outweighs the bad and that's why I am in retail for life.
Aimee
> A brief item in the latest issue of "Pharmacy Times" said that the > pharmacist shortage continues unabated. The article estimated that, for [quoted text clipped - 18 lines] > > ---Franz Kafka |
| Paul Trusten | 06 Oct 2003 01:18 |
A brief item in the latest issue of "Pharmacy Times" said that the pharmacist shortage continues unabated. The article estimated that, for example, the US chain drug industry is short 5500 pharmacists. The cause, it was suggested, is the lenghtening of the pharmacy program by one academic year to make the Pharm.D. degree.
What else is contributing to the shortage, and to what degree do you think it is? Lack of secondary school training, interest, and/or ability in science? Tuition costs? I know that there was a Congressional study on the issue in the late 1990s, but I'd like to hear from the field. What do you think?
Paul Trusten, R.Ph. 3609 Caldera Boulevard Apartment 122 Midland TX 79707-2872 USA 432-694-6208 ptrusten@cox.net
"There are two cardinal sins, from which all the others spring: impatience and laziness."
---Franz Kafka
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