interesting... yes, might have impact on the profession.My SO just got her meds from a machine dispenser, "insty meds", literally something straight looking out of fallout. No dealing with a pharmacist at all.
What is the impact these machines have on careers in the pharm field? First one ive actually seen.
I don't think pharmacists will be replaced anytime soon. They still have to watch out for drug interactions etc. Which I doubt a machine will be able to replace.
Why not? You could write software pretty easily to discover drug mismatches and interactions. It would probably be better than having a person do it where you depend on their memory.
You could just have a giant database of all known drug interactions and issues that the software could interact with based on the patients prescription and medical history.
I can see computer doing searches, but having the computer counter the prescribing doc would be a big stretch.
You guys are talking as if this is theoretical. I can tell you for fact that at least one of the largest pharmacies already does this and has been doing it for quite some time. It isn't difficult.Why not? You could write software pretty easily to discover drug mismatches and interactions. It would probably be better than having a person do it where you depend on their memory.
You could just have a giant database of all known drug interactions and issues that the software could interact with based on the patients prescription and medical history.
I don't think pharmacists will be replaced anytime soon. They still have to watch out for drug interactions etc. Which I doubt a machine will be able to replace.
Yep, screw technology. I hand deliver my emails. In fact, I just delivered this post right here to the ATOT server room.I will not use them, for the same reason I wont use self checkouts at the grocery store
I will not use them, for the same reason I wont use self checkouts at the grocery store
Now if they can just make a machine that can figure out why my doc prescribed a med that my insurance won't pay for, and then get the doc to prescribe something that the insurance WILL pay for, and figure out the exact dosage that insurance approves, and get the doc to prescribe that dosage even though the doc feels that a different dosage would be better, and get that doc to realize that two 5 caps of ramipril are equal to one 10 mg cap, and then get the insurance company to approve of 60 5 mg caps even though the are only 30 days in the month (wait, aren't there 31 days in March?!) and they only want to approve 30 of them -
THEN they can replace the pharmacy techs. Mind you, I feel sorry for pharmacy techs dealing with that.
Anecdote: Well, my father-in-law is a pharmacist. Part of his success is built on the relationships he has with people in the community (customers, doctors). People trust him, etc.
I think this could replace all the techs in the back and serve as a backup to screen for interactions and what not, not so sure about completely eliminating a human, for now anyway.