I feel like this is more for hospitalists but really everyone should know that pharmacists are HUMAN and as surprising as it is, we are only ONE person.
Now, I work in a rural hospital and we are down an entire hospital wing for renovations, 2 full time pharmacists are on vacation this week, and I am scheduled for TWO completely different floors. The more acute floor has 27 patients and the other floor has 20 patients. And that’s just my floors which have about 8 more patients each than any other wing in the hospital. And it’s just me as the only pharmacist trying to verify alllll of those meds, review every patient chart, go to rounds, place orders, dose vancos and warfarins, answer questions, AND speak with patients if they have questions. I am also per diem so I am not on the same floor every single day.
Plus, that floor that closed as I mentioned before had transferred all of the patients to these floors a few weeks ago so it has just been more work overload than ever.
Soooo tell me why my manager gets a nasty email saying I’m not showing up on rounds for one of the floors (mind you that rounds start at the same exact time for both floors AND I had told this attending this same thing yesterday and spoke with her how I am very busy on the other floor because I keep getting questions and also those patients are just more acutely ill). So I had a fun conversation with my manager today. ( I am also a pharmacist of only 8 months so yes I understand that I am still slower and LEARNING).
I’ve been here since November and this just kind of threw me for a loop. It’s hard not to be down on myself because I can’t be in 2 places at once but it sucks when I’m really trying my best. This attending did not even once try to message me (I am signed into shift roles so they can easily see who is covering) so instead she makes a complaint to my bosses.
Please (mostly attendings, but also other pharmacists) remember we are only people too. And maybe think about all the other responsibilities we have. Attendings may have only less than 20 patients that day but sometimes pharmacists have double that amount.