Skip to main content

Pharmacy Technology

  • SEMI helps Michigan doctors go paperless

    Michigan has long been regarded as one of the nation’s most proactive states in the push for adoption of e-prescribing, along with Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Nevada, Delaware, Maryland, North Carolina, New Jersey, Ohio and Washington. The state is home to the Southeastern Michigan ePrescribing Initiative, or SEMI, whose goal is to prove that doctors would actually find paperless prescribing useful once they began working with it and incorporating it into their day-to-day routine.

  • HIT: The $20 billion needle in the haystack

    Dear Mr. President,

    In my first letter to you (see Drug Store News, Dec. 9, 2008, “Dear Mr. President-Elect,” page 12), I implored you to make fixing the U.S. healthcare system the enduring legacy of your presidency.

  • Walgreens ad focuses on pharmacy's and clinic's roll in healthcare reform

    This full-page ad taken out by Walgreens is important as it comes at a time when healthcare reform is top of mind.

    The ad serves as a call to action for healthcare providers, along with state and federal government, to work together to develop a high quality and affordable healthcare system. It also calls for payers, politicians and policy makers to recognize the value of an expanded role for retail-based clinics beyond simply acute care.

  • Journals focus on prevention with multivitamins

    There has always been an undercurrent of thought that a pound of prevention might save an ounce of cure. And now that cure is outweighing prevention in terms of cost, combined with the fact that Americans are looking for just about any way to save a buck these days.

  • Walgreens circles back to Greg Wasson for chief executive spot

    Pick an outside turnaround artist/corporate hotshot to lead the nation’s most storied drug store retailer? Forget it.

  • Rushing HIT legislation could increase healthcare costs

    While Drug Store News has been, and continues to be, a staunch supporter for the widespread adoption of healthcare information technology — as it is the most logical first step toward a working healthcare system where providers communicate, patients get better, and payers get their money’s worth — rushing HIT legislation through in the name of economic stimulus is the wrong idea. And, not because HIT adoption won’t create jobs and stimulate the economy, either.

  • Walgreens outlook not gloom and doom

    For several years, the Walgreens annual shareholders meeting had been a time of yearly celebration; this year, however, executives had a bit of explaining to do, in order to convince investors that the company remains a top-notch investment.

  • Emily's Law elevates role of pharmacy techs in Ohio

    The Ohio Legislature’s passage of a law named for a young girl who died after receiving the wrong IV solution to require a background check and competency test certified by the Ohio State Board of Pharmacy for pharmacy technicians provides a new measure of safety for patients.

X
This ad will auto-close in 10 seconds