Week 7: Learning the Software Dance and Sterile Compounding Shuffle
Hey guys! Grab your lab coats—it’s time to explore the essentials of becoming a pharmacy technician!
For the past few months, we have been using an online outpatient pharmacy software system called Pharmskills Online from the website Pharmacy Skills Lab (pharmacyskillslab.org). Pharmskills Online is an online website that simulates a generic pharmacy software and allows students like my classmates and me to practice our pharmacy computer skills when doing digital tasks like processing prescriptions. It was always satisfying to correctly process each prescription (However, it did take me a few tries for some exercises).
On Monday, we began our first week finished with new NHA content by using a new pharmacy software for the first time. Each student got a login for the program called BestRx. BestRx is a real pharmacy management software used by pharmacies to streamline their operations digitally. It provides tools for prescription processing, inventory management, billing, reporting, e-prescribing, and compliance with regulations. When I logged in for the first time, I was overwhelmed by how different the real software was compared to the simulation that was Pharmskills Online. Countless tabs, buttons, and options filled the screen as I was presented with prescription information for a sample patient ‘John Smith.’ As my instructor Ms. Gilbow went around the classroom to help other students log in, I began exploring the software on my own. After a while, I convinced myself that with time, I will be able to navigate BestRx with ease.
After the great efforts of troubleshooting by Ms. Gilbow and the IT department at JTED, everybody was able to log in to the software. Because this is the first year that the pharmacy technician program at JTED has used BestRx, the software had no mock patients in the program other than the ‘John Smith.’ So, students got into pairs, imagined mock patients, and entered in new patient information into the program as a real technician may do when welcoming new patients into a pharmacy. Together, we came up with fake names, addresses, allergies, preferences, and other qualities for each patient. This activity was really fun because we got creative with our patients.
On the next day, we preformed our first sterile compounding lab. We put on our PPE to get ready for preparing IV bags. Each of us got 3 IV bags to practice with. Because the classroom doesn’t have a laminar airflow hood for us to work in, the lab was a bit messy as we primed the IV tubing. I prepared 3 IV bags with medications. After preparing the liter bag and the five-hundred milliliter bag, I connected the tubing such that the smaller bag was a piggyback IV to the liter bag. Overall, this lab was extremely fun for me!
In general, this week was a great first week finished with new NHA content, and I am excited for more!
Clocking out for now—catch you in the next post!
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