Thursday, August 28, 2008      
         
     Pharmacy Phlash  
         
         
 
Pharmacists Close in on the Medical Pyramid
Monday, March 3, 2008
                    
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More than four decades ago, I took my first job as a Registered Pharmacist. I worked a 48-hour week and was paid $7,000 a year. In the 21st Century, brand new baby Registered Pharmacists earn a starting wage of more than $100,000 annually. Salaries will continue to increase over 22.3% faster than the average for other professions.

I had to tell you that because my chosen profession was close to being the armpit of the medical professions when I started. We were well-trained for the era, but we weren’t allowed to do anything. Around 1970, I warned a patient that she better not drink milk or eat cottage cheese close to her tetracycline dose. Upon learning this, her doctor was all over me.

“What do you think you are? A doctor?”

“I know what I am and I know that calcium containing foods or supplements will interfere with the tetracycline.”

“Just stay in your place,” he warned.

“I am in my place,” I challenged and we almost had a fight. 

And the place where I have stayed has transformed dramatically in 40 years. Pharmacists have a better place now and make a good wage because there aren’t enough of us and there aren’t enough schools. If they built them, would they come? 

Pharmacists are getting closer to the top of the medical pyramid not because the pyramid is flattening (and it is) but because they are competent clinicians. 

Pharmacy is a profession in transition.  Many pharmacists, especially the younger ones, don’t even fill prescriptions anymore. 

 
Posted By Jim Plagakis At 08:28 AM - (CST)
 
 
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AUTHOR BIO
     
   
     
  Jim Plagakis, RPh  
     
  Jim Plagakis, RPh, secured a Bachelor of Science degree in pharmacy in June of 1964. Starting in the mid-1960s, he has practiced pharmacy in Ohio, the San Francisco Bay Area, San Diego, Whidbey Island north of Seattle, and a small New England village in Vermont. Jim and his wife Victoria now live in Galveston, TX, on the Gulf of Mexico. He still works two days a week in an independent pharmacy and doesn’t want to actually retire.  
     
 
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 This column - written by a pharma expert - talks about the challenges surrounding this constantly changing industry. 
     
 
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Pharmacists Close in on the Medical Pyramid
 
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