Robot Pharmacists
Makarand writes "The next time you visit a pharmacy your prescription may be filled by a robot according to a
TechTV article. Hospitals and drugstores are now increasingly relying on automated technology to count, bottle, and label prescription drugs in a faster and more accurate way. The technology uses a bar-code system similar to those used to read prices in grocery stores. Doctors enter prescription details directly into the pharmacy computer. The robot springs into action when an order is recieved. Riding on a conveyor belt, the robot picks up an empty vial, identifies the bar code of the chosen drug, and automatically fills the drug bottle."
I can understand automating away the cashier or the janitor, but automating away a job where human judgment is so crucial is a terrible idea.
the robot accidently refills grandpa's heart medication with viagra?
I'd rather be a conservative nutjob than a liberal with no nuts and no job.
We are just one step closer to the day when we are all out of a job. But that isn't bad news. Everyone works because right now it is necessary. I can't wait until the day when machines can do ALL the work for us, not just dishes and laundry and perscription filling. Then I can sit down and play a nice game of Kingdom Hearts in peace and enjoy Utopia!
Many hospitals use electronic equipment to fill prescriptions for patients inside of the hospital now, as well. Hundreds of deaths are attributed each year to wrong dosages or wrong medications given to patients, and robotic filling equipment virtually eliminates the problem.
I'd wager that it only takes avoiding a single lawsuit to pay for the equipment.
Having seen one of these in action, the device is only as good as the guy filling the drug bins, who thanks to this marvelous technology will be a college intern who stayed up late last night studying for his exams. He will also be the guy checking the picture at the end. "Yup, those are pills."
This is a great first step in avoiding complications, however the problems are caused by human error. They have not solved that problem if "Doctors enter prescription details directly into the pharmacy computer." Adding some sort of check&balance to this system would greatly reduce the change of prescription error related illnesses.
I don't understand why in the US pharmacists need to fill bottles. It seems such a waste of time, and would seem to increase the cost of medication dramatically.
It would be much easier to have them prepackaged at the manufacturer, so the pharmacist simply reaches in the shelf and grabs the prepackaged box of whatever the doctor prescribed.
I'm not sure I fully appreciate the significance of this story. Someone types an order into the computer, and the robot counts and bottles your pills. Isn't this essentially just a vending machine? Don't get me wrong. I like stories about Robots Taking Over the World as the next guy, but a drug-dispensing machine doesn't really do it for me.
Now a robot that TAKES drugs: That's a story.
The real prequel to Star Wars
Is this truly the only Earth I can live on?
This company, http://www.innovat.com (skip flash intro), innovation associates, has some cool technology that does this. For example, if the doctor mistakenly chooses pill A, instead of pill B, the machine will not dispense. Also, you can't fill the Tylenol Aspirin tray with anything but that. It uses some fancy recognition software; it can tell the difference between a skittle and and M&M, plus it won't dispense if pills are deformed (chiped etc.) cool stuff.
Great.
*boop* Milk, 2% - $2.69...
*boop* pretzel sticks - $1.39...
*boop* ... ??? *boop* ... ??? *boop* *boop* *boop* ...??? "Just a moment, sir..."
*skreeeeeeee* "PRICE CHECK ON 200MG TYLAMANEX ANTIDIURETIC INCONTINENCE AID(-id-id-id)!!!??? PRICE CHECK ON 200MG TYLAMANEX ANTIDIURETIC INCONTINENCE AID(-id-id-id-id)!!!???"
Always read the label on your prescription. Know what you're taking!
I once picked up a prescription. Took a pill without reading the label. Got minor but annoying side effects. Next morning, I read the label -- not my prescription!
The pharmacist (actually a student intern) had called my last name and handed me the prescription -- unfortunately there were two orders for different patients the same last name, I happened to get the other guy's pills.
-kgj
First, it was the Cheney Rumsfeld regime.
Then, it was the War on Everything
And, now, robot pharmacists powered by Microslop
Craporation.
likewise while a phamicist might give out the wrong dosage perscription occasionally, if any bulk bottle were miss barcoded the computer would give out the wrong prescription every time. Moreover there's a chance the human pharmacist would actually write on the bottle the wrong dosage thereby giving the patient a chance to catch the error. the computer would just repeat the same error on the bar code onto the bottle.
Now obviously the drug manufacturer's themselves face the problem of getting the right pills in the right bottles all the time and I would guess rarely make mistakes. That is all automated and it works, because they have the resources to do it right. But taking the automation down to the local level is scarey to me. In addition to the possibilty of mistakes there is also the opportunity for maliscious or crimminal attempts. E.g. someone wants to steal some oxy codon, breaks in and accidentally re-orders the bottles. A human phamacist would at least detect the problem.
finally what happens at the major hospital when the power fails, or the computer crashes or the mechanism jams in an earthquake? will they have enough staff available to be called in to do it all by hand. Frankly I doubt it, as similar medical autmation disasters have happened when record keeping systems and test result automation have broken down.
I'm not trying to be a luddite here. But not only is the severity of the issue much larger than say a broken robot on a GM car line but the financial pressure to prematurely implement such a system is very high in the medical community.
Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
Prescription: Give him 20 of [whatever]
Pharmacist: OK, here's 20 of [whatever]
Do they spend two years in college learning to count to 20?
I spent over two years working at NorTel's Bramalea site, which had robotic slide-lines for manufacturing surface-mount component boards. The equipment used tape hoppers of parts, which had individual components mounted on tape similar to a belt-fed machine gun. Once programmed, the robots themselves were flawless, doing exactly what they had been instructed.
The errors that typically cropped up after an assembly program was put in production were caused by good old fashioned human error: loading the wrong parts tape in a hopper (e.g. resistors with the wrong ohm value.)
I cannot see a robotic prescription-filler avoiding this problem. If someone fills the Atenolol (high blood pressure medication) hopper with Viagra, the robot is going to happily count out the correct number of the wrong pills, label them as Atenolol, and leave it up to humans to notice the error.
Cashiers/assistants (sometimes part-time high school or university students) usually hand the packages to customers, not the pharmacist. Even if the bottles aren't pre-bagged, the assistants are very unlikely to notice the pills are the wrong color, size, or shape -- they don't know what the pills are supposed to look like.
While I can see the benefit of a manually fed pill-counter device, all I can forsee from full automation are inevitable mis-filled prescriptions resulting in injury or death of the patients. This is one of the best examples of over-automation I've seen to date.
Some jobs just shouldn't be fully automated, even if we have the technology to do so.
I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
Hmmm. Seems like grandiose use of terminology. The headline makes me picture C3PO standing there handing out medication, but in actuality, it sounds only slightly more advanced than one of those coffee vending machines at the bus station. Sure, it's a machine, but what exactly makes this a robot?
I work for a large (Fortune 500) prescription benefit management company. We use automation in all of our mail order facilities, pumping out 60000 prescriptions A DAY. We have had this technology in place for many years and is the only way mail order pharmacies are cheap and effective. The processing has several quality controls, but at the end of the line you still have a human pharmacist checking the drug. This is required by state laws...And yes, even with automation and 7 checks by machinery including an automated image comparison the pharmacist STILL catches errors.
Pharmacists have been basically obsolete since they stopped making their own drugs anyway. Does it really take four years of university to learn to count pills and put them in a bottle? The pharmacists lobby will never allow this technology to be used except under their supervision, ensuring job security for eons to come.
Call me old fashioned but I simply wouldn't trust any pharmacy that was completely automated. I know people make mistakes but who do you hold responsible when the computer makes a mistake? The hospital ? They will blame the syadmins who will invariably say it was the programmer's fault, ad infinitum. Of course I think direct deposit is too risky too. Maybe it is because when I grew up computerized systems were notoriously unreliable, but there is something to be said about a pharmacist hand packaging your meds and speaking to you about their use at delivery. You lose that sanity check at the slot on a vending machine.
Honestly, this is not the most impressive form of automation I've heard of, it was bound to happen and sounds pretty obvious to me. Warehouse management tasks (and that includes microwarehouses like in pharmacies) can be done quickly and accurately by machines, in a properly designed system.
This is news?
Hardware, software, and blinking lights!
I work for a healthcare organization and we've had one of these for awhile. I see it as a good thing in general, as removing hand-offs between the physician and the drug can reduce errors in miscommunication. The real benefit is when the robot is tied to the medical system, allowing physician order entry, checking for drug interactions, and pop-up notices about new information on certain drugs.
The robot is pretty cool looking too. It's got its own large glass case around it that you can press your nose against as you watch its cute arms whipping around doing its thing.
I don't know what TechTV is up to, but I heard this story a few months ago somewhere else.
Not to mention all that saliva.
One the one hand, the robot will probably count faster than old Mr. Mulligan at my local drug store, so I'll get my prescription in 5 minutes instead of 30 minutes.
On the other hand, the robot will probably count more accurately than old Mr. Mulligan, so I won't get the extra 5 or 10 pills that always seem to end up in my prescription bottle.
Mr. Mulligan counting: "15... 20... 25... 30... 25... 30... 35... I think they're making these bottles smaller. I remember when one of these would hold 50 pills... Damn Koreans! I fought a war so we could have decent sized pill bottles..."
I just hope they wait until he croaks before giving the robot his job. He's like 90 or something, it shouldn't be long.
No more overdose, no more child proof caps!
At least the robot will speak English!
I remember reading a Reader's Digest article about pharmacists not being able to read doctors' handwriting. This would eliminate that problem.
However, it would open a whole new can of worms. For example, who makes sure the robot measures the right amount, or that the bar codes aren't screwed up. A pharmacist filling a prescription might be able to tell when a pink liquid medicaiton is in the place a blue liquid should be, but a robot won't be able to tell. Until we can acheive 100% accuracy, this shouldn't be tried.
We still need people to build and maintain those robots. However that could be replaced by robot-repairing robots, which would also need to maintained.
There is a solution to that however....
This story is 5 years out of date. Baker has had these robots at lest that long. Besides all large mail order companies fill there orders with 100% automated lines. The order is checked just before shipment by licensed pharmacies. This is a non story or issue, it should be taken down.
This seems like a great idea, until I read the line - "Doctors type prescriptions into a pharmacy computer system and the orders send the robot into action." This implies a physician (or health care provider if you prefer a more derogatory term the insurance world uses) will actually use technology.... Not just a computer, but a handheld, tablet PC, something with a browser... the chances are slim to none with most of the baby boomers out there.
My first real world experience with CORBA was connecting a Cobol program on a mainframe to a Java application. The Java app would then shoot drug interaction and formulary data to be used by the Physician's winCE handheld. As a former biochemist that spent a serious amount of time working with MD/PhD's in a hospital, the app seemed like a killer idea - response time was fast, the data was secure, and the information was personalized. Then they tried to get them to use the thing. I understand 'you can lead a horse to water' on a whole new level.
Anyhow, there is the human factor as well. It is hard to beat a well designed smart system, but I like the idea of requiring two humans - one to order the drug, another to confirm. The physician spends a surprisingly little amount of time in the real sciences compared to a pharmacist. Different skill set (filtered on what I consider real science). As a side note, pharmacists were pretty good with technology - since they were using Power Builder thick clients and later web interfaces to deal with co-pays, adjudication, interaction warnings, etc.
Counting pills is not hard. Knowing that pill x with pill y scores you a role on the potion miscibility chart is priceless. A real easy fix to "has to read doctor's handwriting" problem? Get them to type the bloody prescription. Wait that would require them to use some funky software ranging from a typewriter to a computer thing...
nah... too hard.
Had this been a toolkit for a pharmacist, it would really take off.
+++ UGUCAUCGUAUUUCU
They missed the boat on this one. I work for a mail order pharmacedical company that has been using robotics to do the same thing for many years (atleast the 7 that i've been there).
The most common misconception is that it replaces a pharamcist but by law (atleast here in the Pittsburgh PA area) the pharmacist still looks over the pills in the vial. But a pharmacists time is at a premium and machines are much more capable of doing the job of counting with less errors and faster than a human phar tech.
Overall our "defect" rate is on par with your mom and pop store but our RXs per hour count is much higher.
Dedicated Cthulhu Cultist since 4523 BC.
- "...refills grandpa's heart medication with viagra..."
Funny you should choose that phrase...Sildenafil citrate (Viagra) was orininally researched as a heart medication. Pfizer only found out about the, uh, uplifting side effects when their male test patients were extremely reluctant to return test formulations of the drug.
I think this one truly fits the definition of a "happy accident!"
"...America's great minds of today, teaching America's great minds of tomorrow. Poor bastards." -- A Beautiful Min
...by one full day: http://www.linuxmednews.com/linuxmednews/104136357 3/index_html
-- Ignacio Valdes, MD, MS
http://www.LinuxMedNews.com Revolutionizing Medical Education and Practice.
The robot is going to fill out the prescriptions totally perfectly until it fills one out totally wrong.
And sooner or later this is going to happen. UNLESS every pill has a teeny weeny little bar code on it - and I can see this happening - sooner or later there's going to be a Its-A-Wonderful-life level tragedy.
It's Christmas everyday with BitTorrent.
I think a necessary addition to this robotic scheme would be a small camera that could verify that the pills are indeed the correct pills.
Facial recognition systems do exist - it shouldn't be terrible difficult to have a small camera and computer that can make sure that the pills being dispensed look like the correct pills. This idea would of course just be another failsafe in the system - it wouldn't make the system infallible.
If your drug is supposed to be a little green square pill, the camera could just verify that the pills being dispensed match this description so that your fate doesnt rest in a bar code and a college-intern assistant.
I'd rather be a conservative nutjob than a liberal with no nuts and no job.
A pharmacist once made up a label for amoxicillin for my son (an infant then) with three times the regular dose - essentially listing the total daily input as a single dose. I only noticed it when I saw the medicine level in the bottle dropping faster than it should have for a 10 day course. Fortunately, amoxicillin is not toxic in high doses, but other drugs could have killed him.
Let's face it - neither humans not machines are perfect, but machines are less prone to error for routine tasks like prescribing medication.
The prescription filling bots will be loaded by semi-illiterate minimum-wage kids. So the bots will dispense the incorrect drugs flawlessly... I'd prefer dealing with a live human, but since my insurance plan requires me to get mail-order drugs, I'm already at the mercy of god-knows-who/what.
When the machines realize they've made us obsolete, we're all gonna be in trouble.
I have a good friend who owns a large independent pharmacy in New England (I won't be more specific, because I'm not sure if he'd want it mentioned here - though his store and system have been profiled in both trade and general newspapers). He loves it - it handles his top 200 medications, and in his own paraphrased words:
"It lets the pharmacists (of which he is one) spend more time with the patients, and less time counting pills."
He is able to keep a couple fewer pharmacy techs on hand then he used to need for his volume, but it gives the pharmacists a nice assist. He worries less about mistakes - the sanity checks these machines have are a lot more reliable than a human's would be. He's told me he sleeps better at night, knowing the likelihood of a potentially fatal mistake is far lower because of the robot. He sees the role of a pharmacist as being to advise and dispense - with a strong emphasis on the first job.
Here's a true anecdotal story supporting robot usage: I take a Priloec every day. One time I went to my local CVS to get a refill - when I got home and opened the bottle I found Prozac instead (the prescription label was correct - they just filled it with the wrong drug). They took care of the problem immediately, but imagine if I wasn't bright enough to realize that those pills weren't mine (I joke that I'd still have had stomach trouble, but I'd have been happy about it). Fortunately, taking a Prozac per day wouldn't have killed me, but what if it had been something that could have?
That's where I can see robots helping the typical pharmacist. It'll prevent those sort of mistakes from happening, and ensure that the drug ordered is the drug given.
-- Josh Turiel
"2. Do not eat iPod Shuffle."
"Now a robot that TAKES drugs: That's a story."
Viagra for robots.
Now there's a room you don't want to be trapped in.
replace the pharmacist, for all the reasons you've stated and more. The point is to automate one of the routine jobs of the pharmacist where mechanical means is less prone to error and removes an act of pure labor from the job.
The pharmacist should, as a matter of course, double check on the work of the robot, because even robots can make mistakes.
This isn't like replacing the pharmacist. It's like giving a ditch digger a backhoe to replace his shovel, or automating a daily incremental system backup so the admin can spend his time and attention somewhere more profitable.
KFG
McKesson Automation does this for hospitals. I should know, I work for them.
Hospitals like using robots in their pharmacy for a variety of reasons. Safety is reason #1. Barcodes are used, errors are almost non-existant. When there are errors, they are usually due to a human error at some point down the line. Second, it eliminates human need to do that task--freeing time and money.
In addition to dispensing drugs at the pharmacy level, we also make a product that sits at the nursing station level and does fundamentally the same thing dispensing the proper drug. We also have a nurse hand-held barcoding system to ensure the proper medication gets to the proper patient via barcoding -- it checks the nurses barcode, the patients barcode, and the drug barcode.
Check out the link above and go to 'products and services' to see what I'm talking about.
sig--we don't need no goddamn sig
Then of course there still the possibility of error introduced by the pharmacist entering the prescription into the computer.
Wouldn't it be great if the prescription itself can contain a barcode describing the drugs used, which could be scanned into the computer?
SCENE: Gower's Pharmacy, Bedford Falls
...aww, screw this, I'm going to Martini's.
George Bailey: Mr. Gower?
Mr. Gower: Zzzz...ehh, whuzza meh damn kid...
George: Uh, you put the wrong pills in the vial...
Mr. Gower: Uh? Ehh, aska drugbot, mumble mumble.
George: M-mister Drugbot?
DrugBot3000: SLEEP MODE
George: You, you put the wrong pills in the bottle...
DrugBot3000: INVALID COMMAND, PLEASE REPEAT YOUR REQUEST
George: I said, you put the wrong pills in the bottle.
DrugBot3000: INVALID COMMAND, PLEASE REPEAT YOUR REQUEST
George: The pills! You put bad medicine in the bottle!
DrugBot3000: INVALID COMMAND, PLEASE REPEAT YOUR REQUEST
George: Why, you're nothing but a big fraud!
DrugBot3000: ENTERING SLEEP MODE
Gower: Zzzzz....
George:
the robot *wouldn't* make mistakes. He said the robot was less *likely* to.
This is really a pretty undeniable fact. Robots have become ubiquitous in manufacturing largly just because of this. Robots don't come in Monday morning hung over after a fight with their wife. Robots aren't thinking about the upcoming weekend while performing critical tasks. Robots don't even drink beer so they don't have to hide the can of the one they snuck onto the job in the new Chevy's door panel.
Do robots make mistakes? Of course they do. That's why quality control is always best handled by a person. Robots are better at labor, people are better at judgment.
A wise employer puts his people where they will do best, even if his "people" are machines.
You're also making the error of equating large, general purpose computing systems with small, specialized and embeded systems. These systems are *far* more robust than a general purpose computer. They're made that way. They can operate for decades without a single, *computer* related failure ( most failures of robotic systems come from old fashioned mechanical wear of the physical componants).
How much do such systems cost, can a pharmacy afford one? Well, if you look at the low end of such embeded robotic systems you'll find that every pharmacy already has one. It's called a thermostat.
In this case were're only talking about something on the order of sophistication somewhat lower than a desktop CNC mill. Those go for under $10K now.
KFG
Does this mean hand-writing-recognition has reached a huge milestone to actually understand what the doctor writes?
The goofballs at my pharmacy have yet to master COUNTING. The primary, base job of a pharmacist, or pharmacy intern, whoever it is, is to count pills. However, they somehow manage to screw this up. Although, once I got 100 pills for the price of 30 due to their incompetence, which saved me like $60! Heh, of course I didn't complain that time.
"Would it kill you to put down the toilet seat?" -- Maya Angelou
"If some chain store uploaded rev 2.2.4 robo-phamacist with a bug that replaced erythromycin with warfarin we could have a massive computer sized problem."
Which would be a *human* error of fairly massive proprotion involving multiple people over a chain of events.
You do realize you put your life in the hands of such systems every day already, don't you? Who do you think built your car? Who do you think controls the traffic lights? People? Get real. Robots and computers do it, and they do it better.
Ok, lets take it a bit closer to the exact subject at hand. *How do you think these drugs are made in the first place*? A couple of old crones stiring chemicals in vats with old 2x4's?
No, computer controled robotic systems make the drugs because it's proven *safer,* even on the grand scale.
If you want to worry, worry about the pharmacies giving you the right bottle with wrong drug in it because the computer at the manufaturing plant screwed up. Man, that would be a more widespeard disaster than just one chain having a bug. It would be world wide.
Hasn't happened. Relax. As long as people watch the machines the machines make you safer.
KFG
Hopefuly, the software isn't windows based, what a disaster that would be..
Likley a Pharmacy Tech. What's supposed to happen is that they should have had at least some outside verification that they have the math skills, and some basic pharmacokinetic training. If I remember correctly though, it's not required to be so by law in most places. Given the choice of hiring someone with a higher level of education who'd want more money, a pharmacy student who would have odd hours to fit in with their school and want more money, or someone like your friend who'd come cheaper, you can guess what most in that position will hire.
For Entertainment purposes only!
Remember, only with a computer is it possible to make millions of mistakes per second.
fill millions of pillboxes per second, even mistakenly and over the entire span of the installed base,they'll certainly be deserving of some sort of industrial design award.
KFG
I hope they get 'robot insurance,' I recall an ad where it was proven robots attack people to get their perscription drugs - which is what they run on....
"Enjoy what you're doing! If it becomes drudgery, you're doing it wrong!" - Jim Butterfield
.. so now I can watch my pharmacist perform Tai Chi whilst filling my prescriptions.
Trolling is a art,
some work from a sharpie and I'm rolling in crack for life.
wait...
I'm rolling in legal prescription narcotics for life.
Keep your packets off my GNU/Girlfriend!
I am definetly glad I am not a pharmacist and don't take prescription drugs. I would much rather trust a barcode than my doctor's handwriting to save my life.
"Bob! Bob! HEY Bob! So which hopper does the ``Estrogen'' go in?"
-- Anonymous 18 year old grocery clerk
-- Terry
I lived in Europe for a few years (about 10 years ago) and prescription drugs were primarily obtained in packaged bubble packs (20, 30, etc. pills), much like you get many OTC drugs in the US. The advantage, I believe, is better quality control at the delivery end: not having to rely on an overworked pharmacist to dump and count the correct pills. Without a PDR (Physicians Desk Reference) you just can't verify that the pills you get are the ones that should have been prescribed. The US way just seems very backward and labor intensive.
Plus when you get a factory sealed box of pills, you get the package insert and all the information about the drug compound and side effects etc. In the US you always have to ask for that - it should be mandatory!
Interesting fact: In Switzerland, pharmacists are licensed to identify toxic and edible mushrooms and verify them for you. So after your deep woods mushroom collecting, you stop by the pharmacy with your bag of shrooms and get rid of the bad ones before dinner. Don't remember what they say about psychoactive fungi.
The other day my wife said, "Go into pharmacology. They can't outsource that to East Indians because the actual pills are over here."
On the right we have robots, on the left we have $2/hour outsourcing, and in the middle we have PHB's.
The problem is that pharmacies and patients don't use the same terms. When your doctor writes you a prescription, you take it to a pharmacy to get it filled. When the pharmacist takes your prescription script, they fill it and then dispense it to you.
When a pharmacy fills a prescription, what they are doing is to take the ordered quantity of the medication out of their stock and package it; when they dispense a prescription, they present it to the patient along with information about how and when to take it. Filling machines as described in the article don't take the place of a pharmacist -- they're taking the place of the pharmacy techs back inside the pharmacy who type up prescription labels, count out pills, and put them in prescription bottles. This means that the people working in the pharmacy don't have to take as much time preparing the prescription, and can spend more time with the patient.
Fill robots don't replace the pharmacist; what they do is eliminate the place where many medication mistakes occur -- selecting and measuring out the drug that the patient will receive. Drug manufacturers deliberately make pills and capsules with different shapes, colors, sizes and markings in order to help both the patients and the pharmacy staff tell them apart, but a pharmacy tech can still make a mistake and pick the wrong canister off the shelf when pulling a medication, and not notice that they've got the wrong little white pill, particularly when they've got lots of prescriptions to fill. A fill robot doesn't make that mistake; as long as the correct drug is in the correct hopper (and it's easier to make sure you've got the right drug when you're only touching the supply to put another 10,000 pills in the hopper, rather than for each of the 60-pill prescriptions that would be filled from that supply), the fill robot will always pick the correct drug.
And the situation is not as generally clear-cut as the article portrays. Where I work -- a major military hospital -- I am the manager for the pharmacy module of the medical information system at the hospital. The pharmacy has a large fill robot that processes refills; patients can either bring in a prescription for refill or use the phone- or web-based refill system to order their refills. Prescriptions entered for refill are processed by the main medical information system (checking to make sure that there are still refills available on that Rx, that the patient isn't trying to refill the Rx too soon, etc.), and then are sent to the fill robot, which fills and labels the refills, which are then distributed to the satellite pharmacies that the patients have selected to pick up their refills. The prescriptions don't need counselling or instructions, because the patient got those when they got the prescription initially.
I work in a retail setting and have actually seen and used one of these robots. This particular model was by Baker, and is a $125,000 piece of equipment. Most facilities implement one of these robots because of extremely high volumes, to assist in the mundane filling tasks associated with pharmacy. I am not aware of any Federal or State Regulation which allows robots to fill your prescription without a pharmacist on duty, so do not assume that automation of pharmacy means lack of supervision. The Baker unit I described above is sent information from a pharmacy computer, not from a doctor. At this point, I consider direct doctor-to-robot input sketchy at best, unless a prototype model. (Imagine your crusty old country physician firing up his Compaq iPaq and transmitting a prescription on his wireless network to the local robot pharmacy...yeah get the picture?) I know of towns in the rural southwest where the pharmacist literally rides into town once a week to fills rxs that day and that day only... But anyway, this particular robot holds about 180 drugs, holds the vials and caps, and actually fills, prints and labels your prescription. This model can fill about 100 rxs per hour and if it breaks, the ancillary staff has to pick up the slack. I like the analogy previously posted that describes the robot as giving a ditch digger a backhoe instead of a shovel. However, I am very concerned about how technology has affected pharmacy over the last 100 years. WE actually used to compound medication, not a pharmaceutical company in the MAJORITY of cases. Does this mean I want to go back to hand-rolling suppositories? (we used to do that too) No. All I ask is that the benevolent readers of /. be concerned that there is a licensed pharmacist on duty no matter WHO or WHAT fills your prescription. If not, then start to panic :-)
Dom
I'm not sure if this is the same model, but I happened across an infomercial (late night "local businesses get cheap airtime because we didn't even get real infomercials" on a broadcast station) for a local pharmacy showing off theirs.
Theirs is a robotic arm, designed to pull bottles off (existing, in this case wooden) shelving. And yes, they did pimp how much it cost them.
Huh? Couldn't a "vending machine" do the same thing, more reliably, with slightly less risk of error?
Well... I assume (anyone know for sure?) there *are* FDA/DEA auditing regulations that specifically speak to open bottles and the like. As such, a relatively complex, probably more unreliable (picks the wrong bottle, or just drops it/spills it/etc) solution beats out a marginally sensible (pills in bins, automatically counted) solution.
Now, with the vending-machine solution... why not include some sort of machine-readable code on the pill coats themselves, allowing for the machine to self-audit whether the bins have been filled correctly? That'd reduce the "stoned intern" problem, bringing it back to good ol' human error on the part of prescriber (physician) and decrypter (pharmacist)...
Btw, while a few docs use systems for faxing/writing prescriptions, a lot of physicians are attached to writing them out themselves. Without major improvements in OCR, I can't see this working 100%.
will actually save lives IMO. hundreds of Americans die every year by mis-filled prescriptions by pharmacists. human nature and the law of odds dictate that this is an inevitability. plus, a big loss for pharmacies is all the pills pharmacists drop on the floor. if it touches the floor, it must be destroyed. this actually amounts to a sizable amount of expensive medication per month. plus you won't get junky pharacists filching or cutting your meds... which has become increasingly common. the mechanical count will prevent their #1 way of getting their fix.
. SLASHDOT: Home of the vicious nerd.
Yeah...I know it's not a nice thing to say. But fsck that, and fsck the karma too.
All well and good, but who checks the doctor. One advantage of a good pharmacist is they double check the doctors work. Pills often come in different dossages, it doesn't take much for the doctor to mix up and perscribe 5 500mg pills, when 1 500mg or 5 100mg is needed. The results of that can be deadly, so I want someone checking up. Rrobots can be programed to flag that situation, but if there are times when 5 500mg pills are needed then flagging it everytime will be an annoyance, while a pharmacist might know enough about the patient (without beind a doctor) to flag it as wrong only for her situation.
1) People gets tired and bored easily.
2) Pharmacies can save money too hiring half college grads, and half of the overnight crew from Burger king. You'd be naive to think everybody was professionally qualified.
3) People can show customer courtesy and concern. They can also unleash absolute hell and be a real bitch when the lines get long etc.
Those who think the robots are going to fail are the ones who thought refilling by touch-dial phone was impossible. Programmers are computer engineers are already wasted in this economy. Would pharmacists being next really surprise you?
As long as the _people_ responsible for filling up the machine do their jobs properly, it is likely to be much less error prone for the same or lower cost.
In fact in addition to reading the label on the bottle and then using that to decide what drug to put in it, the robot could also print and paste a confirmation label on the reverse side. The person at the counter could then make sure both labels agree on the contents. So if the robot goes out of sync (same barcode but different drug/dose) or misreads the barcode there is a safeguard.
If they use the more expensive 2D barcodes they can do away with the extra print step because the 2D barcode has more space for error detection metadata.
This way it is VERY likely that what's printed on the label is what's inside. Whether it's the right drug is still between the pharmacist and the doctor tho.
But patients can then countercheck the prescription on the Internet e.g. www.rxlist.com
Since you don't have to fill the machine as often, more care could be given to the filling up- might even have more than one person to check and countercheck (just like filling up ATMs with cash). The trouble is some bosses are often tempted to skip counterchecks to save money. Or get some cheap person to fill the machine up, ignoring the great importance of that job.
Many of the Wholesale Pharmacuetical distributors use Robotic order filling machines already. I worked for a couple of them a few years ago. I was impressed that they can use the total weight of the box to tell what may be missing due to a jammed machine, a double drop or the wrong item placed in slot by the stocker. I could see pharmacy's using robots, but I would want a phamacist double check my order (Nothing like getting my insulin at room temperature from a robot)
SuperGlue
Not sure what the difference between this and filling prescriptions would be?
Only gotcha is the stupid licensing laws in the UK that means that a human has to sit and watch the robot (called Cynthia as it 'appens) because you have to have a "person" there to sell alcohol!
Eclectic beats from Leeds, UK
handmadehands.co.uk
As was stated earlier, Pharmacists offer consultation and check the Rx against patient records.
I myself have caught bad Rx's on numerous patients. One was an Rx for Anti-Biotics (Sulphur Type), but the patient was deadly allergic to Sulphur.
Once I had an Rx come in written in an MG dosage that should have been in MCG. This would have kille the man, since it was BP Meds.
With a machine doing all the work, and not tracking, who's to say what you get in the bottle is what is supposed to be there, what is the stocker mislabeld the Bar Code on the bottle, or cell.... Then what...
as a few others here have posted these have been in use at larger places for quite some time - and in many independant pharmacies. In fact, Rite-Aid uses them in their high volume pharmacies and have been for at least 2 years now. There is one fairly close to my hometown. The mistake most people make is to think the pharmacists main role is to put pills in the bottle. In the old days his/her job was to often make medicines for their patients and to advise them on the drugs benifits/side effects. My father in law is a pharmacist and he often tells me tales of the wierd drugs he used to have to make. He owned his own independant until the early 90s and up till then he was still regularly referred patients who needed something special made. Thats part of why a pharmacist has to know so much about Chemistry and is a core part of their cirriculum (or it once was, im not sure anymore). Now however the pharmacist is the last line of defense to make sure the patient is taking meds safely and only take meds they should be taking. Pharmacists can also be held liable if false perscriptions are filled - which can lead to a world of legal trouble for the pharmacist. Especially when dealing with controlled substances. I know in my father-in-laws Rite-Aid pharm techs do most of the bottle filling and labelling. He checks their work and talks to the patient. Finally he is the one who has to put the label on the bottle - its the last sanity check on the Rx to make sure it is correct.
Evolution is as much a fact as the earth turning on its axis and going around
the sun. At one time this was called the Copernican theory; but, when
evidence for a theory becomes so overwhelming that no informed person can
doubt it, it is customary for scientists to call it a fact. That all present
life descended from earlier forms, over vast stretches of geologic time, is
as firmly established as Copernican cosmology. Biologists differ only with
respect to theories about how the process operates.
-- Martin Gardner, "Irving Kristol and the Facts of Life".
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