Okay, I've ranted about the patients at my pharmacy quite a bit. I think today I've finally had it with doctors though. I'm going to vent just a bit about the things that doctors do that irritate the living hell out of me...
1. I know it saves a lot of time and trouble to send prescriptions to us electronically or call them in, but would you please stop telling your patients that they can come right over and it will be ready for them??? You don't know how busy we are and you don't know our rules for handling e-prescriptions. I am getting tired of hearing people complain that you told them it would be ready in 15 minutes.
2. Also on the same subject, don't tell them that a drug is on our $4 generic list unless you have verified that with us first. Trust me, if you are wrong they are going to yell at me about it, not you.
3. Most of you have told your patients that you want the pharmacy to be the one that contacts you for refill requests. That's fine, but please get back to us within a reasonable amount of time. And then don't get annoyed when the patient calls you and yells at you when we've sent you three fax requests over a 7 day period and you haven't yet responded.
4. I know you are busy, but please take a few seconds and double check your prescriptions before you give them to the patient. If you leave off something important such as the quantity or strength, or you forget to sign it, we have to call you and verify the information. This wastes our time and the patients time. Please be extra sure to sign controlled substances because we cannot accept a confirmation on those over the phone. The patient will have to come back to you and get the script signed.
5. When you call our pharmacy to speak to the pharmacist, I may have to put you on hold for a few minutes. If the pharmacist is with a patient or on the other line you will have to wait your turn. I understand that you are busy but so are we. Don't get annoyed that you need to wait a few minutes. If we call you we don't expect you to abandon the patient you are with to get on the phone right away.
6. Please, please, please...when you prescribe a drug that requires prior authorization, please do the paperwork as soon as possible. You obviously want them on this drug or wouldn't have prescribed it. But they can't get it until the insurance approves the prior auth. If you take two weeks to get the paperwork turned in, that's two weeks that the patient goes without the medicine.
7. Please consider the economic status of your patients when writing prescriptions for them. Don't prescribe a drug that costs $275 for the little old lady who has nothing but social security when there is a $12 drug that will work just as well. Please try to have some idea of how much drugs cost because it wastes both of our time when we have to call you for an alternative because the drug is too expensive for the patient. If they don't take their meds because they can't afford them, it does no good.
8. If you can't write legibly, please either type them or get your secretary to fill out the prescriptions and you sign them. It wastes our time and the patients time if they have to wait for us to call you because we can't read your writing. Also, it could have some serious consequences if the wrong medicine is given because of your sloppy writing. Please use your head.
1. I know it saves a lot of time and trouble to send prescriptions to us electronically or call them in, but would you please stop telling your patients that they can come right over and it will be ready for them??? You don't know how busy we are and you don't know our rules for handling e-prescriptions. I am getting tired of hearing people complain that you told them it would be ready in 15 minutes.
2. Also on the same subject, don't tell them that a drug is on our $4 generic list unless you have verified that with us first. Trust me, if you are wrong they are going to yell at me about it, not you.
3. Most of you have told your patients that you want the pharmacy to be the one that contacts you for refill requests. That's fine, but please get back to us within a reasonable amount of time. And then don't get annoyed when the patient calls you and yells at you when we've sent you three fax requests over a 7 day period and you haven't yet responded.
4. I know you are busy, but please take a few seconds and double check your prescriptions before you give them to the patient. If you leave off something important such as the quantity or strength, or you forget to sign it, we have to call you and verify the information. This wastes our time and the patients time. Please be extra sure to sign controlled substances because we cannot accept a confirmation on those over the phone. The patient will have to come back to you and get the script signed.
5. When you call our pharmacy to speak to the pharmacist, I may have to put you on hold for a few minutes. If the pharmacist is with a patient or on the other line you will have to wait your turn. I understand that you are busy but so are we. Don't get annoyed that you need to wait a few minutes. If we call you we don't expect you to abandon the patient you are with to get on the phone right away.
6. Please, please, please...when you prescribe a drug that requires prior authorization, please do the paperwork as soon as possible. You obviously want them on this drug or wouldn't have prescribed it. But they can't get it until the insurance approves the prior auth. If you take two weeks to get the paperwork turned in, that's two weeks that the patient goes without the medicine.
7. Please consider the economic status of your patients when writing prescriptions for them. Don't prescribe a drug that costs $275 for the little old lady who has nothing but social security when there is a $12 drug that will work just as well. Please try to have some idea of how much drugs cost because it wastes both of our time when we have to call you for an alternative because the drug is too expensive for the patient. If they don't take their meds because they can't afford them, it does no good.
8. If you can't write legibly, please either type them or get your secretary to fill out the prescriptions and you sign them. It wastes our time and the patients time if they have to wait for us to call you because we can't read your writing. Also, it could have some serious consequences if the wrong medicine is given because of your sloppy writing. Please use your head.
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