Anonymous wrote:Robbery. And this one should be common sense. If I were a pharmacist, i wouldn't like for people to be calling multiple pharmacies. Why wouldn't the pharmacy that you refill from begin to count you as a recurring patient - I'm assuming this is one you take regularly - and order accordingly?
Anonymous wrote:Pharmacist here-
Pharmacies frequently will not tell callers whether or not a controlled substance is in stock. It is a safety concern. Your best option is to drive to the pharmacy that you intend to use and establish a relationship. At that point, the pharmacy will a) keep the drug in stock for you or b) call other pharmacies on your behalf.
Additionally, the Rx will never be written with refills nor will it be allowed to be called in over the phone, faxed in or sent in by the computer.
Anonymous wrote:Pharmacist here-
Pharmacies frequently will not tell callers whether or not a controlled substance is in stock. It is a safety concern. Your best option is to drive to the pharmacy that you intend to use and establish a relationship. At that point, the pharmacy will a) keep the drug in stock for you or b) call other pharmacies on your behalf.
Additionally, the Rx will never be written with refills nor will it be allowed to be called in over the phone, faxed in or sent in by the computer.
Yup. They have gotten all weird now that the meth addicts have made it difficult for people who actually need the meds to fill prescriptions. The state of the world today.Anonymous wrote:
This is for a controlled class of stimulants (ADHD meds). Pharmacies often don't have many in stock, so a month ago I called at least 10 pharmacies and only one had the dose prescribed by the doctor (generic or label). And here is my nearest pharmacy refusing to tell me over the phone whether they have any in stock - what bores.
What has been your experience? Is there a law regulating what a pharmacist can tell a patient over the phone concerning these meds?
Anonymous wrote:Robbery. And this one should be common sense. If I were a pharmacist, i wouldn't like for people to be calling multiple pharmacies. Why wouldn't the pharmacy that you refill from begin to count you as a recurring patient - I'm assuming this is one you take regularly - and order accordingly?