News0 min ago
Should an out of hours pharmacist have done this?
31 Answers
My toddler has been ill all weekend but worsened this aft so I took him to walk in centre. He had temp of 40 and a throat infection and was inconsolable. I had stupidly come out of house and brought different bag with me without his med in it so he desperately needed some to bring his temp down. By this time it was nearing 6pm and there is only 1 emergency pharmacist open in the area. Got there with a screaming babe in arms to be told he is out on his lunch and will be about 10 mins and theres people waiting before you. What The Funicular? I was not happy and said is there no cover for breaks? No she said. I asked for ibuprfen and she said no I cant sell you it without pharmacist (it was in a locked cupboard). I then argued you dont exactly need a prescription for it and luckily there was some Calprofen on the shelf so she could sell me that. Was this whole situation right though? Surely the only pharmacist in the area should have to be in the building at all times in case he is needed desperately. I was bloody mad!
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by tigwig. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It's correct, tigwig, nowhere will sell you prescription-type medication if the pharmacist isn't there, and the pharmacist is entitled to his lunch break. It's not just on-call pharmacies, it's the same if you go to the pharmacy in Tesco - they only open certain shelves when the pharmacist is actually on duty. It's in the interest of patient safety, the supervising pharmacist must be there and working so that they are aware of what's being sold.
Tigwig, if you went to the walk-in centre, what did they prescribe for you? It seems that a 10-minute break for a chap who's actually had to wait until 6pm to get his lunch break isn't unreasonable at all. Could you not go back home to get the baby's medicine? The pharmacy assistant was completely in the right on this one.
I once had to drag myself to the doctor and then to the pharmacist with a really bad case of tonsilitis. There was no one I could have called to get it for me or even take me to the doctors in the first place and I can honestly say this was the sickest I had been in years.The pharmacist was out on his lunch and had I to wait to fill my prescription. I actually thought I was going to collapse in the twenty minutes or so it took for them to get back and sort my prescription. But the chap was entitled to his lunchbreak and it's not his fault I was so ill and had no one to go out and pick my prescription up for me so I could have gone to bed after seeing the doc.
It was you that came out of the house without the medication after all... put it in to perspective. Yes, it was horrible and you wanted to look afer your baby and who can blame you. But equally, you are over reacting.
It was you that came out of the house without the medication after all... put it in to perspective. Yes, it was horrible and you wanted to look afer your baby and who can blame you. But equally, you are over reacting.
What does annoy me is that the pharmacists in chemists dont have a regular lunchbreak time. It`s annoying when you`ve made a special trip to a chemist to find he/she is not there. I`ve gone at all different times between 12 & 4pm. Before anyone says I should go early, I`m unable to go in the mornings.
I'm not disputing the fact he needed a break, of course he did everyone does. I just thought he would have to stay in the building and therefore be 'on call' if someone was really struggling. Of course if it had been normal hours and there were other chemists open I wold have gone to another. This has happened before at lunch time through the day and its not a problem then as you have the choice to go elsewhere.
Sadly my little one is no better this morning and absolutely hates the med, that much that he threw it all up after I'd managed to get it down him!
Sadly my little one is no better this morning and absolutely hates the med, that much that he threw it all up after I'd managed to get it down him!
If you are on your break then why should you be 'on call' so that effectively you can be disturbed at any point during your break. As bednobs said, no prescription is that urgent that it can't wait for several minutes. Sorry, I do still think you overeacted a bit in this instance although I can understand the frustration.
Beejay - maybe it's not consistent because they have to take the chance while they can. If it suddenly gets really busy at 1pm then they might decide to deal with the customers they have and take their break when it's less busy, at 3.30.
I don't really see how anything in a pharmacy can be that urgent. If it was so urgent then the pharmacy is not the place for you to be.
I don't really see how anything in a pharmacy can be that urgent. If it was so urgent then the pharmacy is not the place for you to be.
-- answer removed --