Or the opposite. “We’ve received your prescription from your doctor but you didn’t ask us to fill it so we didn’t.” I hate CVS.
I really love my local pharmacy. The time it takes to drive from my rheumatologist to the pharmacy, they’d have my script ready.
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“Hey this is CVS, we have your prescription ready”
[Go to CVS]
“Oh, we received the prescription from your doctor but it isn’t filled yet. Can we fill it now? No, come back in 2 hours.”
My pharmacy does this too. Also this: Receive a text that medication is ready. Go to pharmacy. “Sorry, it isn’t ready yet. Come back in half an hour.”
Why did you tell me it’s ready when it wasn’t ready?!?
This just sounds like a manager has a metric of “all prescriptions must be ready in x minutes” and it is easier for the pharmacist to just click “it’s ready” before the alarm goes off.
Happened a few times in China “hey this is your delivery man. Sorry, I clicked the button to reach my quota but I’m still on my way. I’ll be here in a few minutes though, don’t freak out ok?” Never would dream of complaining, they are so good.
I’d be 100% fine with it if they sent a follow up like that. Just don’t wait til I’m there to tell me I’ve been lied to.
Same reason you wait longer if you order inside instead of drive thru.
I don’t understand how it can possibly take 2 hours to count a couple dozen pills, throw them in an orange tube, and slap a label on it. Maybe a pharmacy tech can enlighten me here.
I have worked in a CVS so I can answer this first hand. The main reason is every CVS is critically understaffed to the point of danger to patients.
Beyond that systemic problem that adds delay, actually dispensing the prescription is not the rate limiting step. When you get a prescription there’s a whole list of things you need to do before it can be dispensed. In no particular order:
- Select the right drug which seems easy but the prescriber may have used an old brand name, or misspelled it, or put in something that doesn’t exist.
- Calculate days supply (easy for pills, not so much for insulin, creams, eye drops, etc.)
- Find the correct doctor in the system
- Find the right patient’s profile and see if they really fill at your store
- Transcribe the directions in a way that makes sense in less than ~200 characters to fit on the bottle.
- Check to see if the patient already has another prescription on file they are in the middle of the refills for so you don’t have two active prescriptions.
- Check to see the prescription has all the required information on it to be filled based on state requirements
- Send the finalized prescription to the patient’s insurance which inevitably is rejected because of some minor issue with any of the above, or it is expired, or requires prior authorization, or they changed their name, or it is too soon, or it’s not the proper moon phase.
- Actually fill the prescription which requires finding it on the shelf which is a mess because you fill ~500 prescriptions a day
- Scan the bottle to make sure it’s the same as what you billed the insurance, but if you picked the wrong generic brand on the first step you get to start over.
- Clean the counting tray
- Count the pills
- Get the right vial and label everything with the stickers, and if you need more you need to print more out but someone else has a 50 page print job ahead of you and it’s out of labels
- Answer the phone
- Answer the drive through
- Answer the patient at consultation
- Answer the patient at the cash register
- Send it to the pharmacist for review which is a huge process on it’s own which requires looking for interactions, appropriate dosage, correct drug for the disease indication, and simply reviewing you got everything transcribed correctly which if it isn’t you get to start all over. Plus there are 50-100 prescriptions already waiting for review.
- Process a vaccination patient
- Add water to a reconstitutable (powder) medication
- If Poseidon wills it, the prescription is approved and then you get to bag it, then put it in the right spot in the bins so it can be found.
If it’s a controlled substance you need the pharmacist to do about 50% of the steps above and access the safe which is a whole process. In the meantime they are on the phone with a doctor or some insurance trying to get something clarified or approved. Or compounding someone’s diaper cream. Or doing vaccinations. Or counseling someone on their antibiotic. Some drugs have mandatory monitoring programs you have to enter information from the doctor before they can be dispensed. Some drugs require a dosage syringe, or intramuscular syringes, or needle tips.
Suffice it to to say it is an involved process.
Wow, that is a lot more manual work than I expected. You have to rewrite the directions too? I imagined the prescribing doctor would do that, then all you have to do is look up the order on the computer and print out the label.
Thank you for the explanation, the whole process seems like it could be made more efficient.
Sometimes the doctor will write something in latin abbreviations so you have to translate that and write it out in plain text but you typically want to make sure the entire directions can fit on a single label. If you just say “see attached directions” then you may not get paid for the prescription if their insurance audits it they will take back any payment they gave to the pharmacy because you dispensed incorrectly. They may also just write something unhelpful like, “as directed in discharge paperwork” or “to be dosed by pharmacy” or something really long that can’t easily fit.
That said it’s been several years since i have been there so there may have been more enhancements.
Last prescription I got was antibiotics and steroids for an ear infection. The doctor indeed did give me dosage and schedule. Then the pharmacy also gave me instructions, and they were different. Seeing how each Doctor hopefully keeps up with their field and most likely can’t really with others, I’d say the pharmacy instructions are usually safer unless the patient has specific circumstances only the prescribing doctor is aware of.
Probably because they’re counting pills and throwing them in bottles for a lot of other people, too.
But I’m the only person that matters here.
Are you a Target executive?
All the other people who have ordered meds before you. Also where you told a two hour wait time in person? That’s a little suspect if it’s not a huge order. I worked a very busy pharmacy, and if you are waiting in store we rarely had to ask more than a half hour. In fact a half hour is rare, but a rush when we are short handed…
But if you call ahead or order online, that yea you are just in the line of a few hundred people who needs rxs filled.
My CVS went through a period at one time where even in person prescription, they would ask me to come back later to pick it up. CVS treats its employees like trash, but apparently customers got mad enough that they finally hired some more people because that hasn’t happened in a while.
Corporate CVS is absolutely terrible, to the customers and employees. As a pharm tech, my supervisors (the pharmacists) were awesome. The company was shit to work for and I understand completely how customers feel. Unless you live in a city with like a thousand CVS locations and the multiple locations makes a big difference to you, avoid them.
If you live in a small town type area and that one CVS is all you have? Ask to talk the pharmacy manager. They are one of the two or three pharmacists you see all the time. They cannot stop all the robo calls. But they can make sure that most of the time (that one person is not there every day)that your shit is ready when you want it. Again, CVS sucks but they are forced to hire real people.
I can walk to CVS from my house. That’s the main reason I stay at this pharmacy. The staff there know me and I like them. But fuck the corporation for real.
Because the world doesn’t revolve around you and there are other people as well.
I’m very aware. I was asking why the process takes longer than the steps I described, not for people to passively aggressively state the obvious. An ex pharmacy employee gave a very well written explanation above.
My personal favorite was my insurance at my last job had my prescription coverage managed by CVS caremark. I have a few prescriptions I probably need to take the rest of my life, and after the initial fill at my local pharmacy, they would refuse to cover it unless I had my doctor resend the script to their mail-order service, and had the gall to claim it was for my convenience. Some of said medication is controlled such that I can only refill it within a few days of my current fill running out, bud will conveniently also cause some rather unpleasant withdrawals if I miss a couple of doses. So, “for my convenience,” rather than calling in a refill and walking the two blocks to my local pharmacy, which has my refill ready in 30 minutes for me literally every time, I had to send it off to CVS. Then hope they filled it quick enough and there weren’t any Sundays or holidays to mess with it.
I really feel sorry for pharmacists there. They gotta deal with a dogshit automated system that primes their customers to be cunts when they pick up.
It’s ok, they’re so understaffed they don’t have time to deal with customers
I’ve never used CVS before. Can someone explain?
I call in a refill on my prescription. It takes them 4 years to fill it. Then they text me every five seconds for the next three days until I pick it up, threatening to throw it into the fires of Mordor if I forget.
Thanks for the explanation. This was really confusing, because here we just go to any pharmacy and get our medicine.
You can get your prescription from any pharmacy, but you can only send a prescription to one pharmacy at a time. So if you choose the local CVS and they are taking a long time to fill it, you have to transfer the prescription to another pharmacy (even if it is just a different CVS store).
Are you saying that if you have a prescription, you can go to any pharmacy without pre-arranging anything, and they will give it to you? Are all pharmacies linked to a central system so they all know your prescriptions available and whether they’ve been filled?
Yeah.
The doctor puts my prescription in the system. It’s available in any pharmacy immediately. (Sometimes the doctor makes a note to the backoffice, which will then put it in the system. On a busy day this can take hours.)
I can then go to any pharmacy without pre arranging anything. At the register I say what I want (or if I’m not sure they can check my prescriptions), and a few seconds later I get it, I pay, I leave. I don’t think I’ve ever waited more than a minute.
In some pharmacies there’s a robot that will find the medicine while I continue the conversation and pay, making it zero waiting time.
I’m not sure exactly what “fill it” means to you. Here it means grab a box or bottle from the stock, stick a label on it and hand it over. The label has my name and a note from the doctor about its usage.
Well that sounds a lot more convenient.
By “fill it” I mean put the prescribed number of pills or quantity of liquid into the container. The prescription is not always for a set amount that would be pre-bottled. And sometimes if there is a shortage then they might give me some pills from one manufacturer and some equivalent pills from another manufacturer. (I’m not sure how this kind of stuff is never necessary in your system.)
I’m not sure how they handle that here.
Sometimes I get a box with a ridiculously small amount, I think I got 5 or 8 pills in a box.
I know people who get custom packaged medicine, but that is delivered.
Is this the Sarah Lazarus who is a writer on Lovett or Leave It? She seems so amazing and super funny to me.
Or they try to refill prescriptions that aren’t supposed to be. I got a call from them saying they had contacted my doctor and she wouldn’t let them refill my short term antibiotics, so I should call and fix that so they can give me more that I don’t need.
Meanwhile fuck shoppers drug Mart auto fill. They do it automatically without permission and fill it too early so you wind up with a stockpile of expiring drugs
What is CVS?
A version control system no-one uses. Like every other garbage VCS, it has fallen victim to git’s supremacy.
A curator of the world’s finest receipts.
American drugstore. They sell over the counter medication, blood pressure cuffs, miscellaneous diabetes gizmos, wrist braces etc. Most locations have a built in pharmacy.