anyone here a pharmacist?

accordmaniac

New member
Hey everybody, I'm just wondering if there are a few pharmacists in this big pool of people. I'm in my senior year of high school and I want to be a pharmacist but I'm not 100% sure about it. So I was hoping someone can tell me about themselves and why they chose to become a pharmacist and the highs and lows of being a pharmacist. I would be te first person in my entire family to ever go to to college and I don't want to pick something that will cause me to be a screw up for the rest of my life. Thanks. And if there aren't any I hope someone can delete my post.
 
If you really want to figure it out then try to get a job in a pharmacy. If you are in it simply for the money then I'd try to find something you really want to do. It's good pay but nothing is worth being unhappy for a third of your day.



Be warned the prereq's are difficult. Two semesters: calc, bio, chem, organic chem, physics and at the University of Buffalo economics, stats, world civ (two semesters), 1 american history, writing (2 semesters), intro to psychology, and an art. It's a lot to handle in 4 semesters. GPA requirements are usually set high. If you like these types of courses then you shouldn't have a huge problem.
 
I'm not exactly in it for the money. I just want a job that I can support a family with and don't have to live paycheck to paycheck. And I want to be in the medical field but after volunteering at a local hospital I don't want to be a doctor since its a lot of schooling first of all and seeing all those sick patients really brings my mood down. The prereqs that you listed don't sound too bad besides calculus. Of course I'm going to attempt AP Calc this year so maybe that will help me out when I' taking Calc in college. Also, are you a pharmacist or want to be a pharmacist? Cause if you are I'm curious about why you want to be a pharmacist. Thanks for your reply.
 
Sorry not a pharmacist, but close enought, i'm a pharmacy tech in a hospital. I can give you a couple words of advice from what I see from the pharmacist I work with. I actually kinda like it and was slightly considering a career in it if it weren't for the 5 or 6 years of sciences :soscared:



Pros that I can see are its very rewarding, pay is pretty good, and I *believe* it's in demand so finding a job won't be that hard



Cons are the schooling (I know my uncle who is a pharmacist and everyone else I work with don't even like to talk about their past schoolings) and its a very demanding job. Your dealing with peoples lifes at stake. The pharmacists I work with usually pick up mistakes from doctors quite often :( , but unfortunately sometimes mistakes get made in the pharmacy too and you just gotta hope we can catch the mistake before it gets to the patients.



Sorry that I really can't answer your question since i'm not a pharmacist, but thats what I see from my experience in the pharmacy. My advice is try to get a job as a pharmacy tech or if its to late ask a couple pharmacys if you can sit in and watch. I know we had a high school senior who would just watch and "shadow" us once in a while to get an idea of the job before devoting a lot of time for pharmacy school.
 
accordmaniac said:
The prereqs that you listed don't sound too bad besides calculus.



Calc is nothing to be scared of thought. College classes are different than high school. In two weeks we pretty much covered all the chem I took in high school in my basic chem class. Same goes for my physics class in HS vs. College. You move quick and need to keep up. Get behind and you're screwed. Sitting here now I'm looking back on HS thinking, "I could have made straight A's if I actually did some work"



It's pretty simple stuff especially if you only have to take calc I and since you're going to try AP calc. I don't know much about the pharmacy prereqs or pharmacy school. A guy in my Organic study group is pre-pharmacy though but his dad was one so he knows what he's getting into. He said Organic and Microbiology were his two super hard classes last semester.



Do know it's a tough field and pharmacy school is difficult to get into so you have to compete with everyone else wanting to get in.



Also, the medical field isn't the only place you can go to get jobs to support your family and not have to live pay check by pay check.



Find something you're truly interested in because you're going to be spending a lot of time studying the information and the rest of your life working in the field. Not worth getting into something you don't like.



But, if you don't have to work for it, then it's probably not worth it. Pick a hard major :xyxthumbs
 
My fathers been a pharmacists for over 30 years, 10 years at CVS and over 20 at a local hostpital.

After you get through school most people start out working in a drug store,while they pay very good they do own you for tons of hours, get ready for long days with customers yelling at you when their insurance doesnt cover sometingor they have to wait for thier prescription,or they have no refills left.My father switched to a hostpital because of this and also it gets very boring just filling prescriptions all day. In the hostpital it is much more interesting, working in the IV room making Iv's and chemo's and but some days you still have to fill prescriptions for all the patients. Like JohnnyDaJackal said the parmacists do have to catch all the doctors mistakes, they prescibe medications to their patients that react with other medications thier on and the parmacist has to catch this it happens all the time. All in all I think he liked the job but it does take its toll on you being very stress full and he is really looking foward to retireing early, I hope he does soon
 
I would hate to work in a retail pharmacy for the weird-customer factor.



I was going to go for pharmacy, but it's just not very interesting. I like being on the hospital floors/more involved with patient care.



I know the prereq's don't seem difficult, and yeah Calc I, Chem I, Physics I are all easy. But having to take Calc II, Chem II and Stats in one semester was really taxing. Chem II was....well a trip. I did get a B, B-, and an A respectively, but I went into the semester with a 4.0 thinking I would just be able to grasp everything like I had before. It's a lot to do in 4 semesters, so figure out if you want to really do it first. Luckily these courses can fill other prereq's for other courses. Plan on taking some summer courses, but plan on them being courses you won't need to remember things for :)
 
Thanks guys, at least I know what the pre-reqs are. I know, I'm that clueless. At least I'll be interested in the chemistry and physics if it's a lot of hands on stuff.
 
Corey Bit Spank said:
I know the prereq's don't seem difficult, and yeah Calc I, Chem I, Physics I are all easy. But having to take Calc II, Chem II and Stats in one semester was really taxing. Chem II was....well a trip. I did get a B, B-, and an A respectively, but I went into the semester with a 4.0 thinking I would just be able to grasp everything like I had before. It's a lot to do in 4 semesters, so figure out if you want to really do it first. Luckily these courses can fill other prereq's for other courses. Plan on taking some summer courses, but plan on them being courses you won't need to remember things for :)



Did better than I did in Chem II... I went into the final w/ a low A and well... ugh, didn't come out with that good of a grade. Not going to talk about that... :nervous2:



You taking Organic this semester?
 
Intel486 said:
Did better than I did in Chem II... I went into the final w/ a low A and well... ugh, didn't come out with that good of a grade. Not going to talk about that... :nervous2:



You taking Organic this semester?



Not unless I decide at the last minute to become a PA instead of an NP. And I like the ability to specialize more with an NP degree. And the ability to get in the field after two years.



I know that whatever I do I'm going to go "Maybe I should have." Oh well, such is life.



Chem I at my school was mainly like high school chem. Without those horrible NYS reference tables.
 
accordmaniac said:
Thanks guys, at least I know what the pre-reqs are. I know, I'm that clueless. At least I'll be interested in the chemistry and physics if it's a lot of hands on stuff.



And math. :har:



Anyway, check with the school you want to go to what they are specifically.
 
Corey Bit Spank said:
Not unless I decide at the last minute to become a PA instead of an NP. And I like the ability to specialize more with an NP degree. And the ability to get in the field after two years.



I know that whatever I do I'm going to go "Maybe I should have." Oh well, such is life.



Chem I at my school was mainly like high school chem. Without those horrible NYS reference tables.



Ah, lucky with no organic. lol



I'm planning on taking organic I and II both this semester. lol... Ohh noes
 
I highly recommend taking AP Calculus in high school, then taking the AP test at the end of the year. Score a 3 and you'll usually have enough credit to skip college calculus. The test itself is around $70, which you get back if you pass (sketchy..depends on if the district has extra money, etc), so it'll save you from having to take a college course that could be a lot more.



I took AP tests in english, european history, calculus, and I was ahead by 9 credit hours my freshman year.
 
Sorry for reviving an old thread but i have another question. I am going to apply to the University of Florida because it's one of the better state colleges, but they're highly selective so if I don't get in I'm going to have Florida State as a backup.I'm interested in UF's pharmacy program where you go through undrgrad and go into the pharmacy college. FSU on the other hand only has a pre-pharmacy program where you go through undergrad studying pre-reqs for pharmacy and then applying to a graduate college for another 4 years to earn a pharm d degree. My question is: can you do anything with a pre-pharmacy "degree" or is it like a psych degree where it is completely useless until you earn a pharm d degree? I want to get a pharm d but if the pre-pharmacy thing is completely useless then I might want to rethink my major. Thanks to those who reply.
 
accordmaniac said:
I'm not exactly in it for the money. I just want a job that I can support a family with and don't have to live paycheck to paycheck. And I want to be in the medical field but after volunteering at a local hospital I don't want to be a doctor since its a lot of schooling first of all and seeing all those sick patients really brings my mood down. The prereqs that you listed don't sound too bad besides calculus. Of course I'm going to attempt AP Calc this year so maybe that will help me out when I' taking Calc in college. Also, are you a pharmacist or want to be a pharmacist? Cause if you are I'm curious about why you want to be a pharmacist. Thanks for your reply.

well my wife was a pharm tech at walgreens for 13 years heres my werds.........the only way the moneys good is if your the PHARMICIST..

techs dont make much and not common to get raises, she werked there for 13 yrs than i got her a job at one oof my customers mom and pop pharm. and they hired her at what she left walgreens of 13 yrs and she got a raise every 4 months and FREE meds from there to no matter what her scripts were for!! so just my .02 on BIG corps and mom and pops. ;)
 
Accordmaniac.....I think your best bet is to check the college programs that you have already done and then you might to talk to some local hospital and durg store pharmacists to see if the rigorous college requirements were worth it to them. You can get an RPh or a PharmD (I believe this more advanced degree takes another year). In my hospital, we have finally advanced to having a dispensing pharmacist and a clinical pharmacist covering a certain number of patient care units. The dispensing pharmacist is just that....filling med orders and the clinical pharmacist will attend rounds (at least they do in our critical care uints) and manage therapy that the docs have referred to them for dosing. This includes things like anitbiotics dosing and their drug levels, anticoagulants, making recommendations for antibiotics based on cultures, intervening when med orders are conflicting or not in line with current recommendations, developing protocols for various types of drugs such as Xigris ( used to treat septic shock and costs 9400 bucks!) Incorporating pharmacy into an active clinical role has been invaluable to the rest of us on the healthcare team, docs and nurses (me) alike. I suspect you will do well in whatever you choose to do because you have the sense to ask the quetions you are asking.....critical thinking and common sense are essential and you seem to have both of those. Pharmacists get paid fairly well, but have heavy resposibilites and potential job stress.....features of most professions in healthcare. If you decide that pharmacy is not for you, I hope you will consider nursing.....I think we could use someone like you.
 
Hey mtwedt, do you find nursing rewarding? I was somewhat interested in nursing but I volunteered in the pharmacy department at one of the local hospitals and the pharmacist's job seems important to the well being of the patients so i was interested (I was actually interested in it before but that was when I found out the amount of money they made). In what you do, do you have to see a lot of patients pass away? I may sound greedy asking this but how much do you make? I am the first in my family to ever go to college because we immigrated here from Vietnam so it's important to me to make enough money to support myself and later a family and be financially stable and maybe be able to give some money to my parents each month to help them out. Also I heard a little bit about nurse practitioners and I searched online and couldn't find much info. Do you have a clue to what they do? Sorry for asking you so many questions but it's so nice to have someone that works in field to get info from.



PSL, I looked into pharmacy technician last night after I posted and after looking at the average which is not too far from minimum wage, it turned me off. Also while I was in the pharmacy, the technicians seemed to have more work to do than the pharmacists and they get paid a lot more. Also they all were really stressed especially when it got busy and they had to fill all the meds for all the departments in the hospital.
 
accordmaniac said:
Hey mtwedt, do you find nursing rewarding? I was somewhat interested in nursing but I volunteered in the pharmacy department at one of the local hospitals and the pharmacist's job seems important to the well being of the patients so i was interested (I was actually interested in it before but that was when I found out the amount of money they made). In what you do, do you have to see a lot of patients pass away? I may sound greedy asking this but how much do you make? I am the first in my family to ever go to college because we immigrated here from Vietnam so it's important to me to make enough money to support myself and later a family and be financially stable and maybe be able to give some money to my parents each month to help them out. Also I heard a little bit about nurse practitioners and I searched online and couldn't find much info. Do you have a clue to what they do? Sorry for asking you so many questions but it's so nice to have someone that works in field to get info from.



PSL, I looked into pharmacy technician last night after I posted and after looking at the average which is not too far from minimum wage, it turned me off. Also while I was in the pharmacy, the technicians seemed to have more work to do than the pharmacists and they get paid a lot more. Also they all were really stressed especially when it got busy and they had to fill all the meds for all the departments in the hospital.

Well, you certainly do have alot of questions and they are good ones. Nursing is tremendously rewarding for me for the simple reason that I cannot think of any other way to do for my fellow human beings. The goal fo Nursing is to restore the patient to maixumum level acheivable on the illness/wellness continuum. Nursing's primary mandate for practice is advocacy for the patient and family in the healthcare setting. At 25 years of practice, I make 37.30 an hour here in Portland, OR or about 67,000.00 per year. With premium shift pay, I can make 72.95 per hour. My hospital will pay that much because it is still cheaper than getting agency nurses per diem to cover staffing needs. These are dayshift rates. If I went back to nights, I would get 5.00 more per hour and with clinical ladder 3 (basically doing paperwork and projects that demonstrate your clinical excellence) I would get another 5.00 an hour. That would be about 88,500.00 per year. You can certainly make a decent living practicing nursing, but you will work hard for every penny. Your hard work, though, saves or improves the quality of people's lives. Nursing is not the warm fuzzy stuff that you see on TV ads from Jonhson and Johnson. Caring is a vital component of any of the healthcare professions, not just Nursing. You have to be smart, committed, fast on your feet and fast in your thinking. I practice in Cardiac Surgery, which, in Nursing, is a sub-specialty of Critical Care. There are specialites and sub-specialites in Nursing as in Medicine. The assessment, diagnosis, plan/interventions and evaluation process are essentially the same. You must work as part of a team or the outcomes will not be the best acheivable. I must be able to get on the same page as the Cardiac surgeon as well as the pulmonologist, intensivist, nephrologist, cardiologist, neurologist, clinical dietician, clinical pharmacist, speech, physical and occupational therapists, acute care managers and ethicists. The primary nurse is the coordinator of care and in critical care that can take alot of doing. The cardiac surgeon may not know that filling pressures are up because of changes the pulmonologist made in the ventilator settings that are causing increases in auto-peep and would not even think of this. Nursing fills this gap. The pulmonologist may not know that a platelet count of 20,000 is not related to the intra-aortic balloon as a cardiac surgeon would, but I do and would fill in that gap too. Neither of these physician specialites would have a clue as to how to manage a patient with acute renal failure by using contiuous veno-venous hemodialysis employed by a nephrologist, but I do and can run the machine that performs this. Nursing treats the entire patient in whatever setting the patient is in. People do die....they die whether you participate in patient care or not. Dying is a part of life. While one of the distinct benefits of my area of practice is that cardiac surgery is undertaken to improve quality of life, people die becasue we can't fix everything. The goal in this setting is to bring a quality of closure to the patient and family, ie.....comfort care. This, done well, can be as great a gift and have as great a value as anything else we do. I cannot save everybody.....the last chest I scrubbed to open emergently in the unit died....he simply bled out under my hands. Some of my patients become septic and/or develop multi-system organ failure and die. All you can do sometimes is level the playing field to optimize a potential for recovery and hang on. We have a mortality rate of 2-5%, and we take all comers, including patients that other centers turn down as too risky and we do them sucessfully. In my job, you are part of something much bigger than yourself and it is something that matters. Nursing is the essential bridge or fulcrum of healthcare. You can work in an office, clinic, hospital, school, university or private practice. There are opportunities everywhere in the country and in the world. There are never enough nurses. Nurse practitioners have completed an advanced degree program beyond the 4 year Bachelor's and practice independently under the auspices of a physician for the most part. They have prescription privleges, etc....You must acheive a BSN before moving on to a Nurse Practitioner, Nurse Anesthetist or Nurse Midwife. NP's can specialize in family, acute, adult, crictical care, pediatric, neonatal and probably others. Nursing programs can start with a 2 year Associate degree at the community college and advance to a BSN, MSN and DNsc at the university level. We are also short of master's and doctoral level nurses. In short, you can get in there and get started and then advance your education and degree as interest and opportunity allow. To be sucessful in Nursing, you must do it for the love of the job and the outcomes it can produce for the patients and families under your care. You can make a decent living in Nursing and always have an excellent job market, but it is not a field to go into to make money. It is a field to go into to make a positive difference in people's lives.



Pharmacy technicians make a great deal less than pharmacists becasue the education and training is a drop in the bucket to a pharmacist. Their responsibilites and liabilities are minimal compared to the pharmacist. You may have noticed that the pharmacist must sign off on everything the tech does. The techs assist in mixing IV meds, entering orders, picking up orders and delivering meds for the pharmacist. An excellent pharmacy tech is invaluable to a pharmacist and the units they work on. I can certainly tell the difference between a superb tech and a modestly efficient one. The superb ones do everything within their job role to facilitate and expedite their end of the patient's care, and to the receiving RN, that is invaluable. The same is also true for the pharmacist and just aobut everyone who participates in patient care. Just above minimum wage is not adequate compensation for someone who carries out this job in an exceptional manner.



Well...a long post that has nothing to do with detailing. Perhaps the other forum members will find value in this in understanding just what nursing is. If you have more questions, it would probably be better to PM me and I will give it my best shot. Best of luck to you...MTwedt
 
Back
Top