Biology, asked by Madhurrathi8777, 1 year ago

What is the use of pharma degree when pharmecist has just to read the prescription given by doctor and give the dose

Answers

Answered by PiyushSinghRajput1
0

Reading a doctor’s handwritten prescription can feel like trying to understand a foreign language. Between confusing pharmacy abbreviations, complicated medical names and other bits of information, it’s natural for your eyes to glaze over after just a few seconds. Whether you’re a prospective pharmacy technology student looking to better understand the prescription process or a consumer trying to decode what your doctor writes on your prescription, this educational guide easily breaks down how prescriptions work.

Answered by itzdazzlingqueen
0

❣️\huge\underline\mathfrak{heya}❣️

✨The way that it is supposed to work is that the doctor prescribes the medication and the pharmacist fills the prescription. Pretty simple and straightforward, huh?

✨A new trend in the VA healthcare system is that a physician can prescribe a med and the pharmacist can refuse to fill his/her prescription. They can, and do, override the doctor’s order. This is especially true when it come to pain medications.

✨I used to be on a very low dose painkiller that I took as needed. The last time I saw my primary care doc I was told she could not refill my prescription because the pharmacy would not fill it even if she wrote the script.

✨I’m all for controlling the overprescription of certain types of medications, but in a number of cases the pendulum has swung the other way.

HOPE IT HELPS☺️✔️✔️

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