Spyke
lemmy.zip

Another meme I cannot relate to because I have the privilege of not living in america

60
lemmy.world

Yeah, my pharmacy texts me to confirm I want a refill, then I go pick it up. One extra confirmation text and wait a couple days if there are no more refills

10

To be fair, this is generally my experience in the US as well. However, I do recognize that the insurance I get through my union is very good.

2

Haha was thinking the same thing. Minor issues here for certain medication availabilities at times but nothing that would make this meme relatable to many people!

3

Yup. In the uk, you pay the same charge for each prescription you pick up, whatever it is (or you get an annual flat fee pass if you get more than one a month). So if the pharmacy only found an expensive version, that's a them problem, not a me problem.

2

I live in America take boat loads of meds cause I’m post transplant and don’t have these issues, I think OP needs a new pharmacy

2
jobbiesreply
lemmy.zip

Americans just don't get that brand name medications are exactly the same as generic ones either 😅

1

With prescriptions, it is not about what the customer wants, it is about what brands the insurance wants to cover (and getting a doctor that does not write a brand specific prescription). If an insurance company only covers a weird brand of a common (but expensive) medicine, the customer either has to hunt for a pharmacy that has it in stock, wait for their local pharmacy to order it (in either case delaying when the insurance company has to pay for it), or buy the in-stock brand without any insurance coverage. The insurance can still claim they cover the drug while paying less for it.

At one point, I was on a medicine that had a very high co-pay for the brand name and would not cover the generic. It was so high that it was cheaper for me to buy the generic uninsured instead of paying the co-pay.

7
Oyml77reply
lemmy.today

The active ingredients are exactly the same. The inactive ingredients may differ and there may be some slight differences in bioavailability that for most people are not significant. There is no reason that the vast majority of people can't take a generic equivalent of a branded medication. That said, there are sometimes exceptions that need to be considered on a cases-by-case basis. Anyone who says "I can't take generic medications" is full of shit.

Source: I am a licensed pharmacist.

5
lemmy.ca

Ok...but generics are not always compounded for delivery like the original brand, I.e. slow release, enteric coatings, dose size, different fillers.

But a licensed pharmacist should know that.

1

I don't know if you are in the US, but AB-rated generic equivalents are determined to have a release profile that is within an acceptable range of variance from the reference product to still be considered equivalent. I'm not saying that all diltiazem products are equivalent because obviously Cardizem injection is not the same as Cardizem CD is not the same as Cardizem LA is not the same as Cardizem regular tablet. What I'm saying is that Cardizem CD 240 mg capsules and all of the AB rated equivalents a pharmacy would substitute for it may have some subtle differences, but in general they don't matter clinically for patients.

2
jobbiesreply
lemmy.zip

There is no reason that the vast majority of people can't take a generic equivalent

There's no reason why ANYONE can't take generics. Over here (UK) its extremely unusual to be prescribed a brand. And we're all absolutely fine.

The difference? Pharmas can't advertise their products to the general public. Nobody falls for the marketing guff and nobody makes up reasons to need branded medication.

1
Oyml77reply
lemmy.today

My daughter has an anaphylactic reaction to an inactive ingredient that is present in some generic products but not others. We have to be very aware of what company makes the generics she takes to make sure exactly what they contain. That's why I say most people can take them and not everyone. Some medications will harm her more than help because of an inactive ingredient.

1
jobbiesreply
lemmy.zip

Surely thats a problem with ALL medications then? Not just generics?

2

Possibly. There are branded products that she is allergic to and she's not allergic to the generic, but it tends to be the generics using the ingredient she can't have.

My point is that the generalizations are MOSTLY true, but there can be exceptions. People who discount all generics out of hand are usually just blowhards.

1

The fun part is the generics aren't always the exact same medication! In most cases it is a 1:1 between name brand and generic but there's always edgecases, whether due to allergies or quality control or sometimes the recipe differences actually impact the potence and performance of the medication

3

Not all of them are though my wife can only take the name brand of cimbalta because the generic fucks with her body

0

he just dips in methyelene blue, suntans till his skin is more burnt than a rotisserie chicken and hopped on roids at 70. fun fact the bear incident was just 11years prior.

6

I'm currently stuck in prior authorization hell and used the last dose of my med yesterday. Ugh. I hate this fucking country.

39

I had to set an annual reminder to call insurance to get that sorted out because the pharmacy doesn't know why they rejected it and after a year my ADHD would forget that prior auth was a thing. So good of the insurance company to decide they need to interfere once a year with the medication I have been taking for over a decade!

21
Zorcronreply
lemmy.zip

Might be a long shot, but depending on the med, might want to ask your doctor’s office if they have sample supplies of the med to hold you over until they get the prior auth approved.

5

Generally a good suggestion but having your mental health depend on a controlled substance is a fresh kind of hell. Anyone know how Spain's health care system is for trans folks on testosterone? I can get citizenship in an EU country and a couple of people I know moved to Madrid last year and I think this situation has convinced me to move even if I've forgotten most of the Spanish I once knew.

I did pitch a fit and managed to get it filled today but I never want to deal with this shit again, it's been life-alteringly awful previous times.

6

medications for mental illnesses are controlled so the insurance/hmo adds extra laborious steps to get it. pre-authorization or must have in-person doctors appts,,,etc. its not as fast i need this cream for skin/fungal asap. my insurance in the west requires pre-authorization, plus probably other requirements before refills. they are also more resistant Rx to more pricey drugs too.

2

i currently unable to get topicals for my skin condition because i have a hard time scheduling appoints since i had to use new insurance around my work schedule, which one of "problem solvers" have denied me of changing it. oh yea certain drugs like controlled substances, your insurance people adds extra step to even get it.

2
lemmy.zip

You Americans...I just order my shit wherever I want and have it tomorrow for the best price.

33
piefed.social

Listen pal, we have the god guven RIGHT to buy our medicine at extremely inflated for no reason prices

43
Dyskolosreply
lemmy.zip

I'm sorry man, of course you can!

But in case you'd get it cheaper suddenly, without being asked, you could maybe just throw away the difference or donate it to an evil cause?

9
Dhs92reply
piefed.social

Medication I need refilled monthly is 6-10k without insurance. Yayyyyy

6
Crt_staticreply
lemmy.world

Just one of my meds is $3500 w/o insurance. Another one, just over $1200. Lost my insurance, so let's hope the ole asthma and COPD can deal until I get generics from India

6
piefed.social

Best of luck to you on that.
I'm very lucky, my insurance covers everything because I'm so poor.

1
Crt_staticreply
lemmy.world

They cancelled my Medicaid. I have no physical assets or even a permanent address. Just sleep places. Couple $20k ER bills and the state is reconsidering. Might get reinstated, might not. Can't take anything else from me. Worst they can do is let me die and I'd be fine with that

6
Dyskolosreply
lemmy.zip

For some things those might work more efficient than drugs though. That's a plus, yes?

2

Go back to Russia you communist!

Our private insurers are competing to give us the best drugs at the cheapest price.

Seen here:

1
lemmy.world

I had this bullshit happen in Florida at a Walgreens....I had a doctor put a prescription for me...we had worked together for a good while and finally found a script that works for me. Walgreens tells me they dont carry it, except I've had it filled in the past at that location.

Then this way over stepping mother fucker starts trying to diagnose me and then had the audacity to say, "have your doctor call us and we can see if we can work something out."

Bitch what the fuck do you think the PRESCRIPTION is, that IS the communication between the pharmacy and the doctor, last time I went to Walgreens

25
reddthat.com

Walgreens is just generally the worst pharmacy in the country. I'm convinced they intentionally create delays in picking up the prescriptions that are supposedly already ready to get you to buy more stuff in the store part, plus the store portion is always so chronically understaffed good luck being able to buy anything. Oh and now everything is locked up so you can't even pull stuff off the shelves to attempt to buy anything. And then they wonder why profits keep going down...

6

Walgreens once gave me the wrong prescription, which I didn't notice until after I already taken some. It was some weird drug for schizophrenics or something like that and it totally fucked me up to the point I had to take off work for the day. Instead of apologizing or trying to make the situation right the Walgreens pharmacist was a total asshole to me and tried to blame me for what happened, they acted like I had stolen someone else prescription instead of them fucking up and poisoning me.

5

I commented without reading what everyone else had to say, and the first words I typed were, "Is Walgreen's your pharmacy too?"

What would piss me off is that they would constantly blow up my phone telling me to come get my script, it's ready. Then I get to the pharmacy, and nothing is ready and I have to stand around awkwardly while I wait for them to fill it.

The final straw was I go in person to request a refill 5 days before I am out of meds. "Oh we haven't gotten the shipment yet? Come back tomorrow." So I go back the next day, and the next until I am finally out of meds and they still don't have it in. Like, bitch, I have been filling this RX here for 2 years, do you mother fuckers not understand how to inventory?

After my last refill was up I had my Dr. start sending my scripts to Hannaford. It's further away, but when they call me for my RX it's ready for me when I go to pick it up.

To personify a bit, if I came across Walgreen's dying in the street, I would step the fuck over their body and keep walking.

2
lemmy.world

Pharmacist here. It's not our fault as much as you think. Basically, the insurance companies invented something called "Pharmacy Benefits Managers" who basically act as a middleman between you and your doctor on what you can get, and how much they will reimburse the pharmacy if you do.

If your doctor says you need atorvastatin, but your PBM says they only want to pay for simvastatin, you can either get your doctor to pay for simvastatin, or pay for atorvastatin yourself with a discount card. The cost for a generic med like that is probably about your copay anyways, so no big loss to you to skip the headache.

Surprisingly, they invented fees for pharmacies! If you choose the route to get your doctor to change you to simvastatin, we get the privilege of managing that for you, and once we finally reach your doctor and make the change, they will give us maybe $10 to fill it for you! Plus you have a $10 copay, so there is some money... But of course we have to source the med. It probably costs us like $12 for this example, maybe less maybe more, depending on the manufacturer. So if we do all of this then it seems like we made $8, but SURPRISE, your PBM charged us a fee for utilizing them. It might be $6. It might be more if we don't meet certain criteria, like percentage of diabetic patients on statins.

So okay we have our nice $2 to pay for shipping your med to the oharmacy, renting our location, and filling it (I think it's less than half that on average, I just don't know the actual figures) with our staff. It should come as no surprise that we have very limited options on manufacturers now.

You might say "well at least the PBM fought to make my meds cheaper in the end" but no! They now get to say to your insurance company "okay we managed getting your patient another month of lower cholesterol, please pay us $100 for our efforts". So, indirectly, you paid an extra $100 on this whole thing through your insurance premiums. Not sure on if this part is true I just heard it as a rumor.

But wait there's more! The insurance company actually owns the PBM all along! They paid themselves to offer themselves this service for you!

So anyways I'm getting out of retail pharmacy. Thanks for coming to my ted talk.

22

I didn't need to get this upset before 8am. I don't even take medications, but this is the exact type of nonsense that gets my blood boiling. That there's anyone between a patient and their doctor (or perhaps a patient and a pharmacist) is just screaming for some forced changes.

7
[deleted]reply
piefed.world

Hell, in Kansas I can finally get there scripts sent to the store but I have to talk to someone to get it filled. If they have it in stock. No, their checking isn't always reliable. No, I can't call two days earlier than the hard 28 limit on getting it refilled. I must call no more than 28 days ahead of time.

Also to call and speak to someone I have to spend 2 minutes telling the automated phone system that no, I can't do it on the website and listen to their hours and all the other shit they put in the way of speaking to a human being.

7
Badabinskireply
kbin.earth

Are you going to Walgreens? If so, entering 771 as soon as you hear something will take you straight to a human.

8
Badabinskireply
kbin.earth

Have you tried this yet? I'm interested if it works generally or if it's just a local thing.

EDIT: Sorry about the double post, my client was being weird.

1
[deleted]reply
piefed.world

It does nothing for me here, just keeps blathering on expecting me to say something verbally.

1
piefed.social

I have found that going to literally any other pharmacy besides walgreens or cvs is a significant improvement in competence and convenience.

20

CVS and Walgreens pharmacies are staffed like dollar generals. They can’t handle the load but they won’t hire more pharmacists.

I had a small pharmacy I loved I had to give up on when I got a new job and they weren’t in network. I was not going to CVS or Walgreens.

So I went to the hospital pharmacy that is in network. Can’t imagine that’s any cheaper but whatever insurance.

11

I've had exactly one prescription done at CVS (because I could get my med for like 60% of the cost there) because they managed to be out of stock on my med on month two. Immediately switched back and haven't had a problem

5
reddthat.com

Exactly this! I've been going to a local independent pharmacy chain for years and it is a light-years better experience than either of the national chains

2
piefed.social

I'm pretty limited as to who my insurance covers, so I can't go to any of the independent pharmacies near me. I've been going to the kroger and it's great, they've never once had an issue with my insurance and typically order refills / reach out to my dr for a new script before I even realize I'm low.

3

My in-laws have the same problem so I'll get to experience how bad Walgreens is when they ask me to pick up their prescriptions

1

I am too Indian for this, even though we have a strange habit of copying the shitty parts of the US and ditching the actually functioning parts.

6
lemmy.world

the thing that annoys me is they don't care that you have a chronic condition. it's not going to change. i'm going to need this med for the rest of my life.

but they need my doctor to re-up the prescription every 6 months all the same

17

They do care if you have a chronic condition. If you do, they can charge you as much as they want.

11

This is because the doctor is supposed to be monitoring the condition and adjusting to a better med if one exists.

1
lemmy.world

I pick up prescriptions for people and CVS always fascinates me, they have like 6 people running around looking busy but somehow very few prescriptions are being filled.

16
lemmy.world

Your CVS is staffed? The CVS and Walgreens around me are chronically understaffed. Like one pharmacist and one tech filling prescriptions and handing them out.

Weirdly, the Safeway pharmacy is always very well staffed. 2 pharmacists, 4 techs. I wonder how much better their benefits are than Walgreens.

11

well walgreens is pretty much given, seeing as how a PE firm recently bought the company and its in the process of being gutted. alot of old people near that store depend on it, and most other walgreens have closed in our area.

1
piefed.social

I always see the same thing. Im guessing a big part of the job is inventory and paperwork

9
pelespiritreply
sh.itjust.works

Yeah, don't blame the staff. While I was trying to get a printer fixed so they could print my order at a Walgreens, I overheard someone really berating the staff. He was getting personal.

10
dan1101reply
lemmy.world

Yeah I'm sure procedures need to be followed and maybe too much is better than too little, but Walgreens doesn't seem to operate that slowly.

4

i have heard CVS intentionally short staffs thier pharmacy and stores, the one years ago 10+ i went to and the one downtown barely has people in it, no wonder they close the stores permanently, aside from rising cost and shoplifitng. probably to avoid paying pharmacists too much , and with benefits, since you need a pharmD to become one.

4
kungenreply
feddit.nu

Imagine if America switched to using safer prescription methods... like having everything in blister boxes, just like you see with lots of OTC medicine. Just grab the box, print out the prescription sticker, and you're done. No mistakes, reduced overdose risks, much more traceability, easier stock methods...

Though I can see the appeal in scrambling around, putting loose pills into those funky orange bottles.

3
Agent641reply
lemmy.world

In Australia we don't have pill bottles outside of maybe hospitals. Everything comes in blister packs.

You can't even buy a "bottle" of aspirin or paracetamol, it's all blister packs.

I think the idea is that if someone is trying to OD, or if a child gets hold of them, they have to pop each pill out individually rather than just pop the cap off one bottle and swallow the lot, which is difficult for children and psychologically slows down the suicidal.

3
michaelalfreply
lemmy.world

Australian here, I'm on 7 meds and 4 of them are in bottles. Not the orange pharmacy bottles either, the manufacturer packaging. Common medications too, beta blockers, BP medication, Lithium, etc. I use Chemist Warehouse (Our CVS/chain type pharmacy).

3
Agent641reply
lemmy.world

Interesting, I stand corrected then. I've personally never encountered them in my life

3

Maybe it's a prescription thing. My ADHD meds are literally amphetamine and come in a bottle. Paracetamol comes in blister packs only.

In Estonia not Aus tho

2

Yes some are, I was on lithium too and I'm on Vyvanse - both bottles. But stuff like Panadol, neurofen, cold & flu, all the OTC stuff I can't think of anything that's bottled.

I do think blisters are better. I accidentally overdosed on lithium years ago. It was pretty stupid but I used to use a spare lithium bottle for my next days medication. At the time I was on 21 pills a day so when I accidentally grabbed the wrong bottle and swigged my pills, noticed it felt a little more than usual but not enough to bother checking. Until I got really sick and figured out I'd just taken over 30 lithium pills 🤢

3

they sell them in pill bottles, and online like amazon they have even larger amounts pill per bottle.

1

except amazon is around you can just buy a bottle of otc pills in large bulks, 1-year, to multi year supply(for antihistamines) online.

1

Calling any CVS pharmacy around me is immediately met with an AI system that takes forever to transfer me to a person, where, i kid you not, they will pick up the phone and then leave it on the counter to dead air. Makes refilling my adhd meds very difficult since im required to speak to a person to get them filled.

2

America: Land of the Free, Home of the decreasing average lifespan because people can't get access to routine medications that are affordable in most other countries.

15
feddit.uk

If you are in the US and have a Costco membership, try getting your prescriptions without entering in your insurance. They will put you in the Costco Member Prescription Program. My pills were 75% cheaper. Also this works if you don't have insurance.

14
lemmy.world

My wife recently had an issue where it was either an anaphylactic reaction or scombroid poisoning. They treated her at urgent care and prescribed an EpiPen in case it happened again. The pharmacy comes out and says sorry it's $120. I know my wife has very good insurance so I had to fight with them, surely there's a generic or something? Then they look into it and say well we have a different kind of one that this prescription covers that's $5 but it expires in September. I'm like yeah, obviously I'll take the one that's 24x cheaper. Like why do we have to do this whole bullshit? Why didn't you offer that one 1st? Fuck for profit healthcare.

13
frogreply
feddit.uk

I'm not in the medical field but EpiPens are expensive for their autoinjector technology. Having syringes with 0.3 mg of epinephrine ready would be a lot cheaper.

Source: Wikipedia - Epinephrine

4
cyberfaereply
piefed.social

Downside is, you have to take the time to fill a syringe, which might be difficult if your mid reaction, plus it's harder for a bystander to help you since they would have to work out the correct dose.

I use Toradol for migraines, and doing this mid migraine is hard enough as it is, I can't imagine having to do this in anaphylactic shock.

2

Doctor: for condition A use med B in C manner.

Pharmacist: Oh no, what is he nuts? Never use med B for condition A as it contains flixadidlian cortemolezeum which will react badly to manner C. No you’ll need med D.

13
lemmy.world

yeah, now most of the time the pharmacist is too busy to actually do their job. what people get angry about is when they do it.

2
leminal.space

Oh I’m glad when they do it. But I also find it a little concerning that your doctor is supposed to be the one who knows everything and then it turns out they sometimes seem to talking out if their ass (or that’s what it looks like at the very least, I’m sure there’s more nuance to it).

1

sometimes it's frustrating when the pharmacist is rechecking your work and insisting that the interactions (that you have verified are not a problem via taking the drug for twenty years) are going to be a problem if you accidentally take the drug once. occasionally the patient does know more.

1
mbpreply
slrpnk.net

It's far easier to buy crack online without getting caught than getting your legit Adderall script

4
lemmy.wtf

And to make matters worse there's some sketchy shit going on with reformulation to reduce euphoria 🙄 I'm so mad that I started taking medication because it changed my life and now I'm unstable due to this shit.

3
slrpnk.net

I didn't know about the reformulation thing — is it Adderall that's affected? I'm not personally on Adderall, but I like to be aware of the overall landscape of ADHD meds due to having many friends with ADHD (and also being a nerd)

4

If i recall, and someone correct me if im wrong, back in August the ratio of active ingredient allowed to filler allowed went from 2:1 to 1:1 for adderall.

2

Yeah, the reformulation cut the effectiveness nearly in half for me. I went from stable on the same script for 2 years to suddenly being emotionally agitated all the time, constant headaches, and 0 symptom relief. It took 8 months to figure out, but my provider and I finally landed on using a different manufacturer and nearly double the dose of what i had before to almost get me back to my original stable state.

3
lemmy.world

Ugh yeah, and it's so often based on these ideas like "too many people have adhd" or these worries of addicts. I'm sympathetic to addicts and the misdiagnosed, but at the end of the day, I have a medical condition that requires prescription strength stimulants in order for me to contribute to society and not cause accidental damage to myself and others. No choices were made to cause this other than when two people with adhd decided to have kids.

This whole limited supply thing comes from the drug enforcement agency, cops, not from the fda who are public health officials. Hell a lot of the hoops I have to jump through come from a government more afraid of damage done to those actively seeking this medicine who don't need it than the damage done if I can't consistently get the medicine I need in order to hold down a job, drive safely (or walk safely where cars may be), and not forget to pay my bills, do my laundry, and take dinner off the stove when it's done.

Also the "see a psychiatrist every 3 months" thing is kinda funny because well managed adhd should be pretty consistent. Once it's good annual checkups should be fine to just check you don't need to change dose or drug due to tolerance.

3

I hate the three month appointment requirement. My psych is already overbooked as is and 9 times out of 10 our calls end up being a quick 10 minute check in followed by a 450.00 charge to insurance with 150 uncovered. The alternative is to see a primary care doctor, but they often require a drug test with every visit and its a 50-50 shot they wont try to mess with a script ive had for years.

2
lemmy.world

You forgot the pharmacist who thinks they know more than your doctor and has the gall to opine on your prescription.

12

Yeah pharmacists often know a lot more about drugs than doctors, and they get to focus their whole career on getting good at just that

3
Zubgubreply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

But thats like their main point. Pharmacist do know a lot about drugs. It's important to know about negative drug interactions and a pharmacist is more likely to catch it since they most likely know all the drugs you are taking. Your GP might not know about the drugs your psychiatrist gave you or that off-label drug your dermatologist gave you because people are horrible at knowing what drugs they are on and for what purpose.

17
JennaR8rreply
lemmy.dbzer0.com

Honestly I've always been surprised how much education is required to be a pharmacist when all they do is put pills into a bottle (obeying whatever the doctor wrote on your prescription) and pass it to you through the window. Then imagine going through all the years of University to get a master's degree to work in the back of a CVS.

7
lemmy.ca

Seriously? They source the drugs, in the correct dosage, or they have to compound a drug, they have to know what other drugs you are on for conflicts that could kill you. They also teach you how to take the drugs correctly.

Why do people who have no fucking clue make comments?

7
programming.dev

As an outsider to the field it seems ridiculuous that being a doctor does not include this bit of knowledge. If a pharmacist is expected to do all this and able to override an MD (who can get the prescription wrong).. seems like a circus to me.

2

A pharmacist is much more qualified to give you that information than a fucking Doctor. The pharmacist instructions are for the exact drug in you hand, when you get the drug.

2
Corkyskogreply
sh.itjust.works

There are a lot of bad prescriptions to be honest. The amount of people who are prescribed both Adderall and large fills of benzos is too damn high.

3
lemmy.ca

don't forget all those opiods the MDs told us were non-addictive.

1

That was a shame. Because now we have gone the opposite direction and they are massively under prescribed to who need it.

They aren't even that addictive. Look up addiction rates for people prescribed them legitimately. But saying they were non addictive is obviously fucked up... Pharma reps were literally gaslighting doctors into thinking that they just weren't prescribing enough and that's why their patients were having pain, after 12 hours. Definitely not withdrawal symptoms

4

We should consult the best and knowledgeable unlicensed pharmacist in 46 states, Grant Harting, on this phenomenon.

10
Sprinksreply
lemmy.world

I tagged you at some point with "knows his shit" and youve yet to disappoint.

1
smh
slrpnk.net

contrast this me picking up my dog's prescription meds: "ah, shit, that was his last pill!" "hey, could I get a refill of gabapentin and vetmedin? Let's toss in some canned food. Sure, I can swing by after work. Thanks!"

From my point of view, the difference is there's no insurance involved, so I pay out of pocket and no one has to deal with insurance companies. (pet insurance exists, but I've done the math and it doesn't make financial or logistical sense for me.)

I do like my human pharmacy, but all my human meds are generic and not super controlled or abusable. I gave up on ADHD meds.

6
lightnsfwreply
reddthat.com

there’s no insurance involved

Oh, don't worry they're working on fixing that little "problem" won't be long before veterinary care is as horrible as human health care is. Already have people around me signing up for that shit and raving about how it gives them peace of mind. Morons aren't doing anything but feeding the enshittification.

5
lemmy.ca

They learned from all of the mechanics, plumbers, construction crews and electricians. While most of the rest of the world goes broke these folks will do okay. I once called a company to look at a window that needed replacing and the first thing he said when he walked up is "Your shingles are starting to curl". I went with another company who was more reputable, charged me fairly, and did good work. It's tough out there.

3
Nalivaireply
lemmy.world

But are you sure your shingles aren't starting to curl? Maybe the other one just didn't have a shingles guy so they don't give a fuck about your curled shingles

5

Clearly he put a curling iron to his shingles for that fancy curled shingle look. Why would he want that fixed?

2

fun fact its usually the pharmacy tech that deals with all the bullshit with insurance, the pharamcists rarely do it, they just determine the correct dosage, medicaiton.

3

Every refill feels like a side quest with surprise fees and a boss fight at the counter.

2

The worst is the old people in front of you arguing with them as if they have any ability to do anything. And taking 20 minutes to pick up one medication.

1

Wait. They don’t order it if it’s out of stock?

I just prepay, but don’t have to do that, and they order it. Then I come back half a day later to pick it up

1