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Pharmacy U news

  • The unpopular but necessary decisions of pharmacy managers

    There are countless decisions in pharmacy that we need to make even though they may be less than ideal or feel less than comfortable. As the profession continues to adapt to the complexity of healthcare, pharmacy will continue to change and that will mean having to make unpopular yet necessary decisions.
    Jason Chenard
  • I heard you the second time!

    Have you ever become angry or frustrated because someone didn’t do what you told them to do? Or have you ever not done something in the way you were instructed to do? We all have at one time or another!
    a man wearing a suit and tie smiling and looking at the camera
  • Learn this new pharmacy catchphrase: ‘Hold your water’

    A patient acted surprised when I refused to fill a virtual care order for high dose pregabalin after getting an electronic message that he already filled it somewhere else that day. Given that he received seven different pregabalin prescriptions in the past six months from seven different virtual care clinics located in various cities across Canada, my radar was on high alert.
    Patient watching doctor write a prescription
  • When selling a pharmacy, every team needs a quarterback

    A transition quarterback is primarily an intermediary and an overseer—sort of a “white hat” for the sale project—who ensures that everyone on the team is working together, getting along, and moving in the same direction: towards a satisfactory sale of your business. Without an effective leader, the transition team experience can go wrong in a whole bunch of ways.
    Mike & Max
  • Pharmacy leadership is all about building and maintaining trust

    A bane of my existence in an earlier part of my pharmacy career came around prescription transfer coupons. The company I worked for at the time would put coupons in the weekly circular to invite and entice new patients to transfer some (or all) of their prescriptions to our pharmacy. These promotions would have good results to bring new patients to our pharmacy, but we would struggle to keep them. Why do you suppose that was?
    a man wearing a suit and tie smiling and looking at the camera
  • The difficult yet necessary conversations pharmacy coaches must have

    Hockey has been a big part of my life since the ages of VHS tapes and dial-up internet. While I no longer play competitively (or rewind my movies), I take pride in coaching my kids’ teams. It is here that I have come to realize a similar role hockey coaches and pharmacy managers play in enabling the difficult conversations.
    A group of people wearing hockey equipment on ice
  • Could five minutes change your life?

    What difference can five minutes make for you? Will your pharmacy business be different? How about the way you interact with staff and patients? Or the way you do the jobs you do every day?
    a man wearing a suit and tie smiling and looking at the camera
  • Pharmacists, it’s time to plan your indispensable rest

    To be able to show up purposefully during the work, we need to get purposeful rest. In a profession with countless shortages of personnel and growing responsibility it is extremely difficult to get the rest. The trouble is, if we do not, we will never adapt and be stuck rushing our workouts with little gains.
    Young white woman squatting to lift a heavy weight at the gym
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