Tag: jobs

Fantastic opportunities for clinical pharmacists

| August 3, 2010 | 0 Comments
Fantastic opportunities for clinical pharmacists

PL-UK have been approached by an exciting entrant Into the UK pharmacy market who are looking to set up specialist clinical pharmacy services to patients in the UK.

This US based company is looking to recruit a Clinical Pharmacist counsellor, a dispensary pharmacists and a pharmacy assistant and are offering a fantastic salary package for the right applicant.

The company are based in Northampton and if you would like any more details about the positions, or a copy of the job descriptions//person specification, please call Shaun on 01677 424215 or email shaun@pluk.co.uk

No pharmacy job. Why not relocate?

| July 20, 2010 | 0 Comments
No pharmacy job. Why not relocate?

We are contacted every day by pharmacists and pharmacy technicians from London, Manchester and Birmingham looking for work, both locum and permanent. The honest truth is that it is hard to find.

If you live in one of these area’s think about re-locating. We have regular work in some of the most beautiful parts of the country including the Lake District, Yorkshire Dales and Moors and even in cities with buses, theatres and nightlife!

If you are fed-up with low rates, bad working conditions and/or monthly financial stress give PL-UK a ring – we’d be delighted to help.

Call 0800 881 8844 for more details

Comments of the letters in the PJ

| June 8, 2010 | 0 Comments
Comments of the letters in the PJ

I’ve been on holiday for the last week so have had more time to read the PJ than normal and hasn’t it been an interesting week in terms of comments about locums!

The furore started after the publication in the PJ  (15 May 2010) of a leading article (P466) and Broad Spectrum comment (P474) about the reliance in community pharmacy of a large proportion of locums. They even called the state of affairs  “Something rotten”

Comments on both pieces on PJOnline

You won’t be surprised that I think the conclusions reached by the researchers is a load of old tosh but I do welcome the PJ’s publication as it has opened a really important can-of-worms about the pharmacy workforce.

Why do pharmacists work as locums? In 2000, during the fallow year, the reason was probably mostly financial – the lack of pharmacists registering with the Society meant that the locums available could charge whatever they wanted as they knew that pharmacy operators were desperate. There’s nothing wrong with that, business is all about supply and demand and if there is a large demand and little supply, costs rise.

In 2010 things are very different. It’s probably true that in some parts of the country premium rates are still being paid because of a lack of locums but in many areas, the cost of locums in undoubtedly cheaper than employing a pharmacist, central London being a prime example.

So why then in these areas do pharmacists still want to work as locums? Various letters in the PJ explain why their pharmacist authors don’t like working as employee pharmacists e.g. excessive workload, pressure to undertake MUR’s , low staffing levels, stress etc and, as an ex-employee pharmacists, I can understand all that, but, player devils advocate, a more interesting question is why do pharmacists want to work as employees?

If you think about all the top professions e.g. GP’s, dentists, and solicitors, a high proportion of each work as self employed professionals. They stand on their own-two -feet and stand or fall by the service they provide …. oh, and charge a lot more than self employed pharmacists!

I’ve stated in previous posts that I feel that locum pharmacists (or Independent Pharmacist Practitioners as I like to call them) are the most professional pharmacists, like GP’s, standing or falling by the service they provide and I still feel that this is the case. The locum pharmacists we have working through PL-UK are a highly motivated, professional, conscientious bunch and I am proud that they work with us on a daily basis

The rubbish about locums providing a less effective service doesn’t stand up to scrutiny either, just think about it; All the evidence would indicate that working in a pharmacy, as a pharmacist is more difficult now that ten years ago.  Massively increased workload, less staff, MUR’s, lower profits from dispensing that have put more pressure on pharmacy operators large and small and subsequently, their employee pharmacists. Is it more stressful to work in this environment every day or on an ad-hoc basis as a locum? Locum pharmacists go to a booking and provide the best service they can. They know that it will probably be a busy day and can only do their best.  Even after the horror days that all locums have, they can leave the pharmacy at the end of the trading day safe in the knowledge they they don’t have to work their again. Just think of that pharmacies poor employee pharmacists who has to work in that environment every other day!

So is their “Something Rotten” about community pharmacies reliance on locum pharmacists? Not at all – it’s completely understandable. At University we are told that we are entering an honourable profession and that we must make difficult decisions on a daily basis. Surely, working as a locum pharmacists is the only way (Other than independently owned pharmacist owner/managers) where you can do that in 2010.

National Audit Office reports on pharmacy contract

| March 30, 2010 | 0 Comments
National Audit Office reports on pharmacy contract

New Pharmacy Contract delivers £1.8 billion NHS. C+D report

http://tinyurl.com/yz54cq5

Emergency locum pharmacists

| February 9, 2010 | 1 Comment
Emergency locum pharmacists

We are looking to work with professional, reliable pharmacists who are willing to work on an emergency booking basis.

For some reason we seem to be receiving more and more emergency requests every morning and companies are will to pay top rates to fill these last minute emergencies.

To work as one of our emergency locums we need locum pharmacists to be available from 8am in the morning so we can ensure that pharmacies open on time, or as need to on-time as possible.

Call Linda or Lynne if you are interested in working on an emergency basis 0333 123 3344

PL-UK – for all the best pharmacy jobs