Final Exam — May 22 & 23 2018

Final Exam — May 22 & 23 2018

Final exam is Tuesday May 22, 2018

On Wednesday — May 23, 2018  we will review the Final Exam and give back your grades on the exam — We also will have a compounding lab where we review how to appropriately fill and label prescriptions.

Please work hard to do your best on this exam — you have two hours to take the exam, once completed you may leave.

This exam will determine your ability to move forward for license registration and externship.

On Wednesday we will have a compounding lab where we will review how to appropriately fill and label prescriptions.

To prepare for the exam please do the following:

  1. Review quizzes — Quiz 4 Answer Key Quiz 3 Answers Quiz 2 Answers Quiz 1 Answers
  2. Review Top 200 — Review Brand Generics for OTC products (Pain, Allergy)
  3. Review pharmacy abbreviations
  4. Review Pharmacy Law — In particular the quiz covering Pharmacy Law — Quiz 1 Answers
  5. Review Days Supply — Answers- Pharmacy Math-Days Supply
  6. Review your notes on Calculations from sessions led by Janiece

The Good Teacher

The Good Teacher

Teaching is difficult. Teachers — especially the great teachers, they just don’t receive enough credit. I have actively been teaching a non credit pharmacy technician class the past 8 weeks, while also performing Preceptor duties for 4th year Pharmacy School students.

What have I learned while doing both simultaneously? 

Obviously the biggest difference is that teaching in the community pharmacy is a more hands on experience in that there’s real life scenarios and people versus teaching in the classroom where there’s only the lecturer, student, book, and  white board/chalk board to convey the message.

In the classroom there’s the “audience effect”. You’re lecturing, and you can easily become the only speaker if there’s not a question you give your audience to answer.  Thus, you have to exert more of your body and brain energy into focused segments to convey an effective message.

This burden of energy expenditure being on the speaker/lecturer can be lightened only by actively engaging the student by using the white board, computer, or book to create examples and questions of real life scenarios.

Energy expenditure while teaching in the pharmacy is reduced in comparison to the classroom. The drugs, the patients, the real life scenarios are there to be be used as living examples of why the student must study physiology, pharmacology, infectious disease, pharmaceutics, and so on and so forth.

The student can easily view the drug by going to the shelf. They can learn the pharmacology and use of the drug by simply looking at the package insert that comes with the drug. They can observe the practicing pharmacist or pharmacy technician and learn from their behaviors, movements, speech, and thought process in working together as a team to produce the appropriate final product. The examples do not have to be created in the pharmacy — because the examples are there to be observed, studied, learned, and memorized for the present and future use with patients that day and the days ahead.

This accumulation of knowledge by the pharmacy student and pharmacy technician while on externship can produce a foundation of knowledge for how to talk, when to talk, when not to talk, and when to act.

First point… Good teaching isn’t a lecture, it’s a conversation.

Second point… Good teachers find common ground with the student — so that the thoughts expressed by the teacher can be easily understood by the student.

Third point…Good teachers find out what their student’s baseline of knowledge is.  By understanding their current knowledge or lack thereof — the Good teacher can elevate and motivate the student to an appropriate and/or desired level of competency.

Conclusion — I have a long way to go in becoming identified as one of the “good teachers”. However, I’ve identified these three points too consider while playing this role.

______

Sam Blakemore is the Pharmacy Manager of Peds Rx Pharmacy Solutions. Connect with him via: LinkedIn

“Ready to Work” initiatives and The Pharmacy Technician

“Ready to Work” initiatives and The Pharmacy Technician

The practice of pharmacy grows by leaps and bounds each and everyday.

The education of Student Pharmacists to take on both current & emerging roles in providing pharmaceutical care has occurred and continues to evolve. I have a firm belief that this education will satisfactorily meet and exceed the needs of both current and future patients.

While the Pharmacists education is well defined in that Boards of Pharmacy and National Associations have criteria that you must meet prior to entry into the profession. The Pharmacy Technician’s education is not as well defined. Currently technicians are educated by for-profit institutions, some but not all Community Colleges, and there are some online programs.

Question??

How can Pharmacists fully utilize their education and knowledge in both current and emerging markets – if there is not an appropriate and affordable education model to satisfactorily keep pace with pharmacy technician demand in the market?

It’s my opinion that the greatest demand for the Pharmacy Technician will be in the retail sector. There is a high turnover rate in this market and typically this is the space where an organization can take on registered pharmacy technicians that have no pharmacy experience. With an increase in mergers and acquisitions between chain pharmacy, benefit managers, and health insurers – the demand for registered pharmacy technicians will continue to increase.

Current state laws will also need to keep pace with changes in how both Pharmacists and Pharmacy Technicians are utilized in the Pharmacy.

  1. Telemedicine
  2. Pharmacy Technician verification via Barcode technology (http://www.ajhp.org/content/73/2/69?sso-checked=true)
  3. Medication therapy management
  4. Pharmacist Practitioners
  5. Collaborative practice models
  6. The increased market-share of “specialty pharmacy”
  7. Compounding pharmacies regulated by federal guidelines USP 795, 797, and 800

These are all topics to consider when considering the job market and demand for both the practicing Pharmacist and Pharmacy Technician.

What can fill the education gap?

I had never heard of the “Ready to Work” initiatives taking place in Birmingham, AL. But after meeting Ms. Dorothy Henry and leadership at Lawson State Community College — I stumbled upon an institution that is at the forefront of this community based initiative.

Ready to Work programs can offer job seekers foundational knowledge to take on entry level job positions. “Ready to Work” educational healthcare tracks include medical assistant, patient care assistant, and pharmacy technician. These programs help folks learn how to become registered and/or certified to take on entry level positions in the workforce.

Having a job that you care about and enjoy is good for the individual because it increases self-worth. It’s good for the family because it provides a stable source of income. It’s great for both the community and local economy because the money can be recycled into tangible purchases of goods, services, and long term assets.

I’ve had the pleasure of working with folks interested in becoming registered Pharmacy Technicians through this program. And I really believe that this could be an opportunity where more Pharmacists can serve and become involved in helping young people find a career in their local community. Programs like this help to ensure that there are affordable avenues for people to learn and become aware of professions that can be a source for both a rewarding career and steady income. I have posted my lecture materials online at www.samblakemore.com . Feel free to follow along and give back any comments and/or positive feedback.

Sam Blakemore is the Pharmacy Manager of Peds Rx Pharmacy Solutions. Connect with him via: LinkedInSupport the effort and Purchase Merch

 

 

 

Pharmacy Technician 101 MidPoint!!!

Pharmacy Technician 101 MidPoint!!!

We will be at the halfway point after April 25th!

To review all materials covered please follow these links:

Syllabus:

Pharmacy Technician 101 Syllabus

Lectures:

  1. Pharmacy Technician 101 — Lecture 1 & Lecture 2
  2. Lecture 3–Chapter 7 & 16
  3. Lecture 4–April 11
  4. Lecture 5, 6, and 7 — Review
  5. Lecture 6–April 19, 2018
  6. Lecture 7– April 24, 2018
  7. Lecture 8 — April 25, 2018

Quizzes and Questions: 

  1. Quiz 1 & Quiz 1 Answers
  2. Pharmacy Math-Days Supply
  3. Quiz 2 & Quiz 2 Answers
  4. Quiz 3 & Quiz 3 Answers

Lecture 8 — April 25, 2018

Lecture 8 — April 25, 2018

We will have a brief lecture on Chapter 4

Audio for Lecture 8: 

We will then complete whatever calculations problems that remain from the handout: Lecture 6 & 7

A topic of great importance is “Billing” — please review Chapter 15

There will be a review of all materials covered up until this point in our lecture series.

By this point we we will have covered 10 Chapters — if you haven’t kept up, we have covered the following chapters: 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 13, 15, 16, 17, 18, and the top 200

Thus this lecture period will be an opportunity for your questions and concerns. So please come prepared to have a lively discussion!

 

Lecture 7– April 24, 2018

Lecture 7– April 24, 2018

You will first complete Quiz 3 which completes our coverage of the top 200 drugs

We will then go over Quiz 3 answers with any followup questions

Update: Quiz 3 Answers

Then there will be a brief lecture on Chapter 18 of your textbook

Next, there will be a discussions over our lecture packet that was given in the form of a handout on April 19, 2018 “Lecture 6 & 7″  Please refer to the following link if you were unable to attend class on this date: Lecture 6–April 19, 2018