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Pharmacy U news

  • Is your pharmacy brain stuck in training mode?

    The problem with pharmacy is that it is all practice. It is training without race day. The daily grind offers much of the same training as it did the day before. After a short time, we become jaded. We practise with repetitive questions, monotonous problems, completing the daily-weekly-monthly tasks and draft endless calendars.
    Jason Chenard triathlete
  • The critical components to develop exceptional staff, using the Finnish model

    Pharmacy can learn from a world-class Finnish education system by bringing more prestige, calibre and preparedness to our managers. We can also creatively find ways to make the job more fun and autonomous. We can also shift to treating our lowest skilled staff to their potential instead of their current status quo.
    Pharmacy staff
  • Q&A with Pharmacy U presenter Ajit Johal: ‘The future of pharmacy is chronic disease management.’

    I have been a presenter at Pharmacy U since 2018, where I gave a presentation on travel medicine. I have always been impressed with the event attendance and, specifically, engagement from attendees to elevate their practice.
    Ajit Johal
  • Compliance or adherence in the world of pharmacy

    In the world of medications, we want patients to take their appropriately prescribed medications regularly to obtain the intended benefit. Is this done through compliance or adherence? The intent of the two terms is the same, but the spirit is entirely different. And it’s the spirit that counts in the end when leading patients to take their medications.
    A pharmacist pricks a patient’s finger for a blood glucose test
  • Q&A with PharmacyU presenter Trish Molberg: ‘Continuous learning has always been a driving force in my career.’

    The shift in recognizing obesity as a chronic disease, rather than simply a lifestyle issue, has elevated the importance of its management within healthcare. Pharmacists are excited because this change aligns with their focus on chronic disease management and provides new opportunities to address obesity with the same seriousness as diabetes or hypertension.
    Headshot of Trish Molberg smiling
  • Are you developing the pharmacy talent around you?

    Make no mistake, as leaders, it is important to develop the people around us. This is not limited to support staff. It also includes helping to develop our peers and even the people we report to. When we develop people, we increase the overall capacity of the organization, and we instill an increased feeling of ownership with our team members.
    Pharmacy staff
  • Icebergs, nuclear weapons and taking a new pharmacy job

    In pharmacy, the iceberg principle will apply at each step of promotion along the various dispensary or head office jobs. This will also apply in the change from managerial to ownership roles. We can only see what we understand and the truth hits home when we finally step inside.
    Jason Chenard
  • Introducing my 9 Fs of leadership

    The days of ‘Command and Control’ – ‘Do as I say, not as I do’ – are long gone, and thankfully so. You don’t have to be the CEO to influence the culture of your organization or store. Everyone plays a part in the establishment of the work culture; the CEO simply sets the tone and encourages similar behaviours from every team member.
    Doug Sherman
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