Questions For Pharmacists! Because I wanna be one! Interview Please reply with detailed answers

Pharmacist

What is your job title

How long have you worked in your present job?

Do you love it? Or do you want to leave it?

Why are you working as a transportation business owner

Is this the type of job you dreamed you would have. If so how did you make it happen. If not,

how did you end up with this job.

Do you feel this job pays enough money to allow you to live the lifestyle you want to live?

Does this job match your interests and hobbies? Does it match your values? Does it match your skills? How so?

Do you see yourself switching jobs before you retire? If so, what do you want to do?

If you could go back to your senior year in highschool and do anything differently in relation to your career and school choices would you?

What advice do you have for me since i’m in the process of figuring out what i’d like to do for a potential career.

What types of things do you do in a workday?

what sort of people do you think make the best pharmacists?

What are the difficult aspects you face as a pharmacist?

How do you keep up with the developments in medicine?

Do you work in a CVS type location or a hospital? Would you wanna have your own pharmacy later on?

Try here http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/pre-pharmacy-pharmacy-school/

Don’t do it. Just stop!! I have been a pharmacist for over 20 years. Mostly retail. Turn back now while you still have time. This is literally what I told my kids. You can be anything you want but a pharmacist! if you do then you are dead to me!! Well I didn’t say the last part but I was close.

My husband is a retail pharmacist and has been for over 20 years. He likes his job. He particularly likes the people side of things. The best pharmacists are extremely detail oriented, enjoy working in a team environment, have great communication skills, and do care about helping people. His job involves lots of time on the phone with doctors, patients, and insurance companies. Lots of problem solving. It involves lots of standing (all day), and lots of time on the computer. He also counsels patients about their medications, and gives immunizations. His work hours include weekends and many holidays, and most shifts are longer than 8 hours. He is happy with his salary. He doesn’t like the constant pressure to meet corporate goals. If he were to make a change he would probably like to work in a nursing home (he truly loves working with the elderly) or maybe just go part time.
The preparation required to be a pharmacist is similar to premed–lots of science and math, particularly chemistry. Admission to pharmacy school is quite competitive. My husband decided to pursue pharmacy in his third year of college. He has a bachelor’s in biochemistry and his pharmD. He has to renew his license every two years and this requires a bunch of continuing education. His employer provides access to continuing education but there are plenty of other resources available outside of this as well.

Huh?

You should try to shadow a local pharmacist and ask these questions.
Try to talk to someone in retail and hospital pharmacy

Pharmacy has become a terrible investment for your education. The job market is saturated and getting worse each year as mergers (CVS + Target, Walgreens + Rite Aid) are set to eliminate jobs and more schools continue to open each year with no end in sight. Retail (where the vast majority of the jobs are) is getting tougher to manage as chains cut hours.

There are other professions, i.e. computer programming, finance, accounting, engineering that pay as much as pharmacy does, provide a better of quality of life (without all the impossible metrics, verbally abusive customers, and standing all day in retail), and do not require you to graduate with $200k+ in loans and spend an additional 4 years in school.

After pharmD or a MS in pharmaceutics/pharma… some folks join the industry. Do you think people like these have a career?