We're getting close to that time of year... flu shot season. And I remember last year's complete fiasco, especially January. In case you don't remember, there was a surge of flu in early January, prompting every media outlet to tell people to go get a flu shot. And apparently most of them came to my location. Or at least it felt that way.
In any healthcare business, patient
safety is paramount and trumps all other issues entirely. In the
course of running any business, proper management dictates normal
planning PLUS additional contingency plans in case of emergencies.
Running a pharmacy without proper staffing in a healthcare setting
dangerously puts patient safety at risk. No matter what the situation
or emergency, a contingency plan is warranted and additional help
should be available on call to fill in the gaps as necessary. The influenza immunization rush of January, 2013, should be a clear signal to
management that better planning is required for any future onslaught
of business.
There are many people unemployed. There
are qualified people who WANT to be Goofmart technicians. And yet
these people are not being hired! The decision to under staff the
pharmacies is a management decision that clearly does not consider
the importance of patient safety or a rush of business. Our
competitors staff their pharmacies with a much higher pharmacist/tech
ratio. Even during later hours and weekends, our competitors ALL have more than adequate technician
help. The decision to properly staff the pharmacies at our
competitors makes Goofmart appear to our customers that we're more
concerned about profit and less concerned about medication accuracy
and patient safety. This is absolutely inexcusable, and quite
frankly, embarrassing.
At my pharmacy in Janurary, 2013,
staffing needs were seriously overlooked. As a result, inadequate
staffing put our patients' safety as risk, Moreover, the overload
that ensued not only made the pharmacy staff look foolish, it
seriously compromised patient safety. For example, the increased flu
shots increased our script count that week 33%. People were lined up
ten deep into the aisles at times waiting for an immunization.
Regular patients and customers became disillusioned and angry because
the normal wait times they have come to expect was just not possible.
Other prescriptions were rushed through the system just to keep up. Mind you, most pharmacy errors occur when pharmacists are rushed. Attempts were made to arrange and schedule people during the pharmacist overlap hours, and this helped slightly, but the majority of people wanted their flu shot NOW, not during pharmacist overlap time. Our attempts to keep up with demand were not met. Some patients were not happy with the situation and rightly so. If we had normal technician coverage (like our competitors) and additional help to call in as needed, the immunization rush would have been much easier on everyone.
Other prescriptions were rushed through the system just to keep up. Mind you, most pharmacy errors occur when pharmacists are rushed. Attempts were made to arrange and schedule people during the pharmacist overlap hours, and this helped slightly, but the majority of people wanted their flu shot NOW, not during pharmacist overlap time. Our attempts to keep up with demand were not met. Some patients were not happy with the situation and rightly so. If we had normal technician coverage (like our competitors) and additional help to call in as needed, the immunization rush would have been much easier on everyone.
I have no doubt those in Goofmart's
management circles will say that “everything is being done" to
ensure patient safety in regard to technician staffing. I would
really like to believe that. I would. BUT when I see myself, my
pharmacy partner, and other Goofmart pharmacists all around the state
constantly being overrun without proper help, it is hard to believe.
One slow period and management quickly cuts the tech hours, but
a sudden ramp up in business met with “It is what it is, deal with
it.” When I see thousands upon thousands of dollars spent on a
“Goodness” room, the additional technician time and technician
hours spent to keep it clean, and then when the “Goodness” room
fails to provide a single penny of profit to the company, I MUST
question the management allocation of these resources.
My Goofmart Pharmacy is a company of serious
contradictions and bipolar behavior. Why is there no money for proper
tech coverage, but there IS money to play to clean a room that's not
even used? Why is there no money for tech hours, but there IS money
to pay a guy to come around and check a logbook to see if the
“Goodness” room has been cleaned? Why is there no money for
proper tech coverage, but there IS money to build an additional
counseling room? Countless sums of money spent for NOTHING! Why was
the pharmacists' retirement funding “temporarily” chopped in half
but there's money to spend on these “Goodness” rooms that TO DATE
have NOT BEEN USED? This type of discombobulated behavior smacks of a
company desperately in trouble, grasping for straws which do not
exist, run by leaders which lack the testicular fortitude to stand up
and say “Something is not right!” We're expected to piss away
time doing “Quake and Zap” then spend additional time going back
over the list to fix the inventory after “Quake and Zap” screws
it up! Tell me, what sense does that make? Now the company has money
to build extra little immunization/counseling rooms but there's STILL
no money for proper tech coverage? THIS IS EPIC WTF!
A lot of pharmacists and technicians
are out here and there and everywhere due to illness. In the course
of PROPER managerial planning, BACKUP floater technicians and
pharmacists would NORMALLY be in place for just such an event. Having
a pool of floaters that can step in and help when needed is NORMAL.
Relying on your pharmacy partner to cover for you all the time is
ridiculous. We have LIVES outside of Goofmart. Some of us have
children, some of us have elderly parents to care for. YOU CAN NOT
JUST EXPECT ONE PHARMACIST TO STEP IN AND WORK 80 HOURS A WEEK!
Would you drive down the road at 90mph
without your seat belt on? No, you need that backup to protect you
and save your life! But Goofmart expects you to drive without a seat
belt all the time! There is limited help, way too few floaters, to
help out when things go bad. Placing the responsibility and burden of
work solely on the backs of pharmacists is not only inappropriate; it
once again conflicts with the number one priority: PATIENT SAFETY!
Whatever excuse is postulated as to why there is no reserve help, it
fails to justify the current situation. It is, quite frankly,
inexcusable. With the lack of planning for contingencies and by not
having backup floaters, there are many of us who believe Goofmart must
be in serious financial trouble. I keep trying to tell myself that
there must be something I'm overlooking here... that these
contradictions are just my imagination, but I keep coming back to the
same conclusion: Goofmart management doesn't have a freaking clue
what's really going on. Who in their right mind would approve “Quake and Zap”? Apparently the same person who's saying let's have techs
clean empty rooms instead of helping in the pharmacy.
The influenza scare was incredibly stressful. Hopefully during the onslaught of business and the lack of
proper staffing, no mistakes were made in the process. Hopefully
people who saw how foolish we looked will forgive and forget and give
Goofmart Pharmacy another try. BUT, for the future, I also hope that
someone steps up and challenges upper management on their irrational
(and inevitably deadly) decision to under staff our pharmacies. Next
time we may not be so lucky. I hope and pray no one gets hurt. Mark
my words; someone WILL get hurt if we don't get proper technician
help in the pharmacies.
And when that happens, I will step
forward and make it known to the media and Board of Pharmacy that we
sounded the cry but our cries were left unanswered. I will not be held hostage by a company unwilling to consider the
most important thing to all of us: Patient Safety!
8 comments:
I'm so relieved to see that I'm not the only one concerned about it. Thank you, you're the voice of pharmacy PRACTICE, not a crooks in upper management who never filled a single prescription
Management seems to only pay lip-service to patient safety these days. I am picking up a strong undercurrent of dissatisfaction with the current state of the profession. Pharmacists are getting fed-up. Pretty soon more and more pharmacists are going to be willing to stand up for patient care and refuse to be held hostage by their employers.
wow, what got you started? we are starting flu shots in about a week. The CDC had a great podcast about the upcoming season. Free and worth one credit of CE. Did the company promote it.? No..... instead we had a 2 hr meeting about more metrics and reports and making more binders.
BTW, your Sunday funnies were the best yet! Hope you don't mind if I pass them on!
bcmigal: "a 2 hr meeting about more metrics and reports and making more binders"
LOL! both funny and sad at the same time.
The flu shot madness that took place last jan/feb was awful. Of course this took place after hour tech hours were cut almost 15%. Trying to do shot after shot with only 1 tech on the whole day..plus keep up with waiters doctor calls, addressing the escripts and voicemails within 15 minutes was impossible. I remember one day being so bad I just wanted to sit and the bays and cry. I just can't believe management didn't let stores increase tech hours temporarily during this time.
I think we work for the same place !
I have been out of the crazy world of retail/grocer for nearly 4 months now and am AMAZED that I can put in a good day's work without running on adrenaline all day. But I'm doubly glad that I will be giving ZERO flu shots this year
In my store we have no RPH overlap, ever. We get tech overlap Mon from 12-6, Tue 12-4, Thu 11-3, Fri 1-3 and that's it. Otherwise it's one tech, and the RPH is alone one hr in am and one in pm. Sundays they're alone 3 hrs in am. No extra hrs during flu season. it's absurd.
Post a Comment