Automated DispensingEssay Preview: Automated DispensingReport this essayIntroductionAutomated dispensing is a system being implemented in todays pharmacys nation wide. It involves the use of machines pre stocked with drugs that are programmed to automatically dispense physicians orders upon request.
Changing rolesWith technology advancing, the role of both the pharmacy technician and the pharmacist is taking a swing toward making the dispensary a better work environment. Automatic dispensing systems are taking over the dispensing issues of the pharmacy and technicians fear they will take over their job completely. The duties of a pharmacy technician are counting pills and placing them in the proper vials with lids and applying the appropriate labels to assist the pharmacist in anyway possible so they can spend more time with patients. Maybe in the smaller pharmacies some technicians will lose their job, but in the busier and bigger pharmacies, technicians will become an asset. The machines cant stock themselves. Someone needs to keep the cabinets well stocked and all the products will have to be checked for expiry dates on a regular basis. Everyday pharmacy supplies have to be maintained, ordering and receiving of products has to be looked after, and the filing of the prescriptions and sales records has to be filed on a daily basis. These jobs will always be available and machines will never replace the technician completely because even when you think there is nothing to do, there is always something.
Along with the role of the pharmacy technician changing, the role of the pharmacist is taking a turn towards better patient care. In some pharmacies the pharmacist does all the dispensing and there are no technicians involved, but with the automated dispensing system performing these duties, pharmacists will be inclined to spend more time with patients to discuss their medications with them and to monitor their drug therapy in order to provide optimal pharmaceutical care. By spending more time with patients and getting to know them, maybe pharmacists could pick up on some of the compliance issues that are arising. In a lot of cases, patients arent coming at the proper time for their blood pressure pills, or they are buying a box of test strips every four months which means they arent using their medications properly; if pharmacists had enough time to spend a few minutes with all patients, maybe this could be picked up on and resolved before the patients condition worsens.
AdvantagesAutomated dispensing has many advantages as well as drawbacks. Some of the advantages include improved efficiency, enhanced safety, and improved use of space. (1)
When a prescription is dropped off at the drop off window, either a pharmacist or a pharmacy technician must input the order into a computer to generate a label. Then they have to walk to the stock area and pick the right drug and strength and bring it back to the counter area, where it is counted and placed in a vial that is capped and labelled. The next step is to perform a 7-point check to verify the patient, the doctor, the drug and strength, the amount dispensed and remaining, the directions for use and the drug identification number(DIN) of the drug. The pharmacist then does a double check on all information and bags it before handing it to the cashier to give to the patient. With automated dispensing systems, the order is entered into a pharmacy computer by the pharmacist, where it is transmitted to the automated dispensary, which picks the drug by bar code identification, label it and dispenses the finished product back to the pharmacist to verify and pass on to the patient. It is more effective and can generate orders 10 times faster then the average technician.
Automated dispensing enhances safety to both the patients and to the work environment. When manually selecting a bottle, it is very easy to select the wrong one especially with different strengths such as antibiotic liquids like amoxil or biaxin. The use of automated picking by bar code identification can reduce the amount of picking errors. In a busy pharmacy, there are usually at least 2-3 technicians filling and running around to the shelves for stock bottles in the little area they have and an accident is bound to happen. Whether is be bumping into someone, tripping on a phone cord, or tripping over boxes of stock lying around on the floor because there was no time to put it away. The work environment will be more relaxed and quieter
Manual dispensing requires most of the space to be taken up with about 7-8 shelves of stock bottles, not to mention the vials, lids, bottles, and all the other dispensing supplies needed for day to day operation. In smaller pharmacies automated dispensing systems could free up some of the space because everything would be stored inside the cabinet.
DisadvantagesSome of the drawbacks include order entry errors, system failure, machine defects, cost, and product defects.(2)Pharmacists are humans, and believe it or not, humans make mistakes. If they miscalculate a dose or accidentally enter the wrong order into the system, guess what? The computer is not going to pick it up. The brains of the system is just going to go and pick the drug that was entered and stick the label on the bottle and dispenses it to the pharmacist for distribution. And what happens if we become so dependent on these systems and begin to think they will never make a mistake and fail to double check what comes out? The customer gets the wrong drug, and if its something like warfarin, where a mg can mean a lot, theyll know soon enough.
The Pharmacist in charge of our product may not be the first or only person to say to the pharmacist that “but hey, it could have been easy, maybe a more reliable way to get rid of a serious drug.” But sometimes the pharmacist’s actions are a complete shambles. That said, these days most pharmacists who are doing their job should be aware that they cannot just throw pills with unnecessary packaging.
If we’re to use this method to help people have more confidence at the time of purchasing new drugs we have to be willing to deal with many problems that we can’t eliminate through a single decision, right?
We have to be open and honest with ourselves and the patient at all the same time. And we also have to be careful not to act on bad information, because we are all looking for the wrong answer. And if we’re so concerned about the good and bad of our product over a product that we are not going to just keep trying, we probably won’t do that very well.
To better understand our health care business, consider these:
Most medications are expensive to administer as well as to manufacture. This makes it difficult to see the value in the medicine being performed, but it also makes prescribing a new type of medication harder because it will require more money to produce. A larger cost could make administering the same medication in larger quantity amounts, which could drive up the costs so that they increase or decrease at the same time, depending on the medications.
We may see medications that work by themselves as well as those that don’t. This may reduce the perceived health care utility of the medications we buy, but it also will make it nearly impossible to get the full benefits of these medications out of our system as a whole.
There are risks to using any new medical device over a period of time. The drugmaker may think the new health care solution we currently have with it is going to be too expensive and unnecessary, which could make it hard to realize and use in the future. Or because of a lower cost per milliliter of new medication, or because of a larger cost for a different drug that the drugmaker won’t be able to use, or perhaps because the drug maker’s new new product is probably too expensive to offer because of the high cost factor in our system.
If we aren’t clear on when to stop offering our products to patients with drug-related illnesses, as is our practice in general, we risk losing out on our value proposition altogether. If we become so reliant on this sort of system, we may find that we do not have things that we would like to give people enough and want. And the more likely that we do, the more we tend to put ourselves in situations where the things we want we could not do otherwise.
Another risk of going too far in marketing a new product with so little information is that our message could be confusing (
No machine will run forever without shorting out. Be it a power outage or a manufacturer defect, machines are bound to shut down from time to time. If the pharmacy doesnt have some sort of back up system installed to manually keep tract of inventory and the system crashes,