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Pharmacists start with a high salary, but there is little movement over time. You’re essentially capped the moment you start.
Also, retail work is the worst. As others have said, you are overworked, you’re working with high school graduates for assistants who are oftentimes not committed at a professional standard, you’re on your feet all day, and your boss is the store manager, who is typically a non-college educated person who resents that you think you’re better than them. |
OP here, if you are willing to use pharmacy education as a foundation and pivot your career as needed, you can create your own options because a doctorate degree in pharmacy allows you to have those options. However, it’s not easy. Hospital pharmacist are really bright and professional but also overworked. They are not paid enough for their expertise. You can get a residency or fellowship and then work for a hospital but those jobs are limited and not paid well for the years of education and training. It’s easier to be a nurse practitioner or physicians assistant. |
It does seem like a very clear use case for AI |
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Most of you know little about pharmacy beyond going to your local CVS. That's your only experience.
OP, read the student doctor forum. Don't come here. |
| I know a young couple both hospital pharmacists. They make 350K between them. Very smart and passionate about their profession. The key is securing residencies and specializing beyond the PharmD. |
Dumb rational. Insurance dictates the prices so it’s now very low margin |
+1. And mail-order pharmacies are putting a lot of downward pressure on salaries, benefits. Many national pharmacy chains are having financial problems. Go read the 8K SEC filings for several of them. |
It's not that much education depending on the state. It is a 6 year degree program in NY to get a job that basically pays you mid-six figures straight out of grad school. There used to be a pharmacist shortage, not so much anymore, but still it's a fairly lucrative job particularly in states with aging populations. |
| Sounds like the best route is to work in Pharma with a PharmD degree. Good money and not a lot of work. Why would anyone choose retail-sounds horrible. |
| Absolutely not. Worse than doctor hours, lower pay. |
I've never met a PharmD working in pharma. |
Yep, it’s generally understood that hospital work is better working conditions than retail, but also much harder to get those jobs. Even large hospitals don’t need *that* many pharmacists. Also, pharma companies don’t really hire or need many pharmacists. |
No. Not secure at all, are you unaware of retail mergers? Many pharmacist jobs have been made part time so need 2 retail jobs. It’s awful. |
Pharma companies don’t really need PharmDs… pharmacists aren’t qualified or trained to do the scientific work needed in the lab , so they’d have to hire actual scientists for those roles. And they don’t usually have the business skills for jobs on the business side. |
The hospital jobs are hard to get and my guess is they did very well in school if they both got hospital jobs. |