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Hi Everyone,

Just found out I was in Drug Topics magazine and no one told me.

Anyways for whatever it is worth here is my " Letter to the Editor "

which was published on June 4th 2007 Edition.

Joe Medina, CPhT

--------------

Techs shouldn't be hired off the street

Having read the May 7 " Viewpoint " by NPTA's Mike ston, I would

like to add my response.

The topic of national standardized education for pharmacy technicians

is not a new one, and I have been pursuing this avenue for almost a

decade now. The " 20/20 " broadcast, though sensationalized, did hit on

the fact that something must be done to ensure patient safety.

Patients have always been led to believe that their prescription for

the IV solutions that run in their veins was filled by a practicing

pharmacist. The reality is that technicians fill 95% of prescription

orders, including those for IV solutions. This in itself would not be

a cause for alarm but for the fact that technicians in several states

need no prior education or experience to work in the pharmacy setting.

In fact, some state boards of pharmacy do not even recognize

technicians as part of pharmacy.

If I were a consumer, I would question why a technician—and not the

pharmacist—is filling my prescription order. It is the pharmacist in

whom I place my trust. The answer is simply that there is a major

shortage of pharmacists nationwide, and the role of the technician has

changed to more of a dispensing function than simply one of working

the cash register.

Many employers, pharmacists, and even state boards argue that

technicians are trained and in some cases must be certified by passing

a national exam to work in pharmacy. In other states a technician can

be hired off the street with no prior experience. Employers may

require a national certification exam, which does exist, but this exam

can be taken by someone with no formal education or prior experience.

In fact, one can take the national exam having never stepped foot in a

pharmacy. So what validity does the national exam offer besides the

fact that one studied the books and passed?

I am a true national advocate for pharmacy technicians and I believe

they are capable of filling medication orders. But I also believe that

without proper training of all technicians, medication errors will

continue. The more consumers become aware of who is filling their

prescriptions, the more they will demand accountability via

standardized formal education for technicians in both the didactic and

the practical sense.

Joe Medina, CPhT

National Pharmacy Technician Advocate

President/Founder, Tech Lectures

joemedina@...

Source:

http://www.drugtopics.com/drugtopics/article/articleDetail.jsp?id=429699 & searchS\

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