Monday, 6 May 2019

Moving from community pharmacy to industry

Moving from community to hospital pharmacy. Gaining new skills outside of pharmacy I started exploring careers in industry and came across regulatory affairs. This profession involves teams of people who utilise science, regulatory and business skills to get medicines from the production line and bring them to the market. Hospital pharmacy is a competitive sector — hospital pharmacists comprise 15– of the Register and the number of pre-registration places in community pharmacy outweighs that in hospitals.


From community to hospital, GP practices and research – the take home message for anyone considering which career path to choose is: take every opportunity available.

There are so many opportunities for pharmacists to work in industry ,” Ms Kilby told attendees, listing examples such as research and development, market access, health outcomes and commercial roles like sales and marketing. The pharmaceutical industry offers pharmacists many opportunities to use their specialist skills in a variety of roles, from drug research and development through to sales and marketing. However, some pharmacists believe that they will be unable to secure a position in a pharmaceutical company without prior industry or research experience. If you have been working in community pharmacy for some time and are keen to make that move to the hospital sector - How should you go about this. Here’s our top tips to making the move :- 1. Build up your transferable skills – Customer service is key in hospital pharmacy and often lacking.


I started working in community pharmacy and after my preregistration year, I moved into the hospital service. While in the hospital service, I had the opportunity to work overseas and to develop an interest in computers.

Armed with this background I embarked on my career in the pharmaceutical industry. Dear pharmacists, The decision to leave community pharmacy and join the industry is the most and challenging task for young pharmacists. Any pharmacy allows profitability and promotions to be w. I’m used to changing and adjusting to new roles, having completed my pre-registration year in a hospital setting, followed by time as a locum and then a community pharmacy manager.


When the time came to make the transition from working in a community pharmacy to becoming a primary care network (PCN) pharmacist earlier this year, I was a bag of nerves. Over the last three years much has changed that has impacted and continues to impact on community pharmacy in England and the pharmaceutical industry (See box 1). These provide both opportunities and challenges for community pharmacy as it realises its full potential within the primary healthcare team.


The nature of innovation is changing an with it, pharmacy models. Transformation of the supply chain. This will become even more prevalent as the higher-value biologic therapies that currently dominate industry pipelines move into hospitals, out-patient settings and homes. Community dispensing is already dominated by commodity generics.


Changes to the NHS community pharmacy contract have meant a shift of services from NHS primary care to the for profit community pharmacy sector. Elizabeth Richardson and Allyson M Pollock look at the extent of the changes to community pharmacy in the UK, and explain the implications. Deregulation and changes to the NHS community pharmacy contract in England and Wales have allowed for the shift.


The healthcare industry — and top PBMs specifically — are experiencing external pressure and changing internal power structures that are allowing them to make huge strides in the way that pharmaceuticals are distributed. For community pharmacies and patients, this could be good news.

Kenneth C Hohmeier, PharmD. It’s no surprise that the dynamics of health care have shifted in recent years. Patient demand for convenient, cost-effective he.


I would be grateful if anyone could shed some light on my query. This question has been asked numerous times on the forum. In short, the answer to your first question is no. Just finished my clinical pharmacy course and about to start IP course.


I have just applied for a position of clinical pharmacist at local surgery. As it is all very new to me, I would really welcome any advice you can offer. Can you please share any observations and suggestions.

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