At work today, a mother dropped off a prescription for Tamiflu suspension for her son (who she had in tow). I asked if she wanted to wait and she stated that she did. Realizing the flu is no joke, I put a bit of a rush on it and processed it as fast as possible, including compounding the medication (mixing the contents of Tamiflu capsules with cherry syrup). All in all, the process took about 20 minutes. The pharmacist called her name and the mother got the medication.
Only after the patient left did I find out that her son was suffering from H1N1. And, to make things worse, the mother sat in our waiting area among the senior citizens waiting for their prescriptions while a line of other senior citizens queued for the pick-up counter not 3 feet away. Upon being told this, I had a minor freak-out. The H1N1 vaccine isn't ready for public use yet and, as such, no one has any antibodies for it.
Imagine how it felt for me to tell my girlfriend that I couldn't touch her when she picked me up from work because I had been exposed to H1N1. I've just now gotten out of the shower after scrubbing my body clean with Hibiclens (a medical grade disinfectant wash).
Only after the patient left did I find out that her son was suffering from H1N1. And, to make things worse, the mother sat in our waiting area among the senior citizens waiting for their prescriptions while a line of other senior citizens queued for the pick-up counter not 3 feet away. Upon being told this, I had a minor freak-out. The H1N1 vaccine isn't ready for public use yet and, as such, no one has any antibodies for it.
Imagine how it felt for me to tell my girlfriend that I couldn't touch her when she picked me up from work because I had been exposed to H1N1. I've just now gotten out of the shower after scrubbing my body clean with Hibiclens (a medical grade disinfectant wash).
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