Key Takeaways
- Pharmacy technicians assist pharmacists in preparing and dispensing medications.
- Technicians cannot counsel patients, perform drug utilization review, or make clinical decisions.
- All technician work must be verified by a licensed pharmacist.
- Scope of practice varies by state and pharmacy setting.
- Common duties include medication preparation, inventory management, and billing.
Role and Scope of Practice
Understanding the role and scope of practice for pharmacy technicians is fundamental to the ExCPT exam. This section covers what technicians can and cannot do, the importance of pharmacist supervision, and how duties vary across different pharmacy settings.
What Is a Pharmacy Technician?
A pharmacy technician is a healthcare professional who assists licensed pharmacists in preparing and dispensing prescription medications. Technicians work under the direct supervision of a pharmacist and are essential to the efficient operation of any pharmacy.
Key Point: While technicians perform many important tasks, they always work under the supervision and authority of a licensed pharmacist. The pharmacist bears ultimate responsibility for all prescriptions dispensed.
General Duties of Pharmacy Technicians
Pharmacy technicians perform a wide variety of tasks that support the pharmacist and ensure patients receive their medications safely and efficiently.
Common Technician Responsibilities
| Task Category | Examples |
|---|---|
| Medication Preparation | Counting, pouring, measuring medications; preparing IV admixtures; compounding |
| Prescription Processing | Receiving prescriptions, entering data, processing refills, transferring prescriptions |
| Inventory Management | Ordering medications, checking expiration dates, rotating stock, handling recalls |
| Administrative Tasks | Billing insurance, handling prior authorizations, managing patient profiles |
| Customer Service | Answering phones, taking refill requests, directing patients to pharmacist |
| Quality Assurance | Maintaining clean work areas, following safety protocols, equipment maintenance |
Tasks ONLY Pharmacists Can Perform
Certain tasks require professional judgment and are legally restricted to licensed pharmacists. Pharmacy technicians are NOT permitted to perform:
Pharmacist-Only Functions
- Patient Counseling - Discussing medications, side effects, or drug interactions with patients
- Drug Utilization Review (DUR) - Reviewing patient profiles for potential problems
- Clinical Decisions - Recommending OTC products, making therapeutic substitutions
- Final Verification - Approving the accuracy of a filled prescription
- Taking New Prescriptions by Phone - In most states, only pharmacists can accept verbal orders
- Immunizations - Administering vaccines (except where state law permits technicians)
Exam Tip
If an exam question asks about patient counseling, therapeutic recommendations, or final verification, the answer is always pharmacist only. Technicians support these functions but cannot perform them independently.
Pharmacist Supervision Requirements
All pharmacy technician duties must be performed under the supervision of a licensed pharmacist. The level of supervision varies by state and task.
Types of Supervision
| Supervision Level | Definition | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Direct Supervision | Pharmacist is physically present and can observe/assist | Compounding, IV preparation |
| Indirect Supervision | Pharmacist is on-site but not directly observing | Processing refills, inventory |
| General Supervision | Pharmacist is accessible but not necessarily on-site | Rare; varies by state |
Key Point: Most states require direct supervision for any tasks involving controlled substances or high-risk activities like sterile compounding.
Technician-to-Pharmacist Ratios
States regulate how many technicians a single pharmacist can supervise. These ratios vary by state and setting.
| Common Ratios | Description |
|---|---|
| 2:1 | Two technicians per pharmacist (conservative states) |
| 3:1 | Three technicians per pharmacist (common ratio) |
| 4:1 | Four technicians per pharmacist (some states) |
| Tech-Check-Tech | Certified technicians can verify other technicians' work in some settings |
Note: Always verify your state's specific technician-to-pharmacist ratio requirements.
Pharmacy Settings and Their Differences
Pharmacy technicians work in various settings, each with unique responsibilities and workflows.
Community/Retail Pharmacy
The most common practice setting for pharmacy technicians.
Typical Duties:
- Processing prescriptions and insurance claims
- Counting and dispensing oral medications
- Customer service and phone management
- Managing over-the-counter (OTC) product questions (directing complex questions to pharmacist)
- Point-of-sale transactions
Hospital/Institutional Pharmacy
Hospital technicians often have more specialized responsibilities.
Typical Duties:
- Preparing unit-dose medications
- Compounding IV admixtures and parenteral nutrition
- Delivering medications to nursing units
- Managing automated dispensing cabinets (ADCs)
- Operating robotic dispensing systems
Mail-Order Pharmacy
High-volume operations with technology-focused workflows.
Typical Duties:
- High-volume prescription processing
- Operating automated dispensing equipment
- Quality control checks
- Packaging and shipping medications
- Managing large inventory systems
Long-Term Care Pharmacy
Serving nursing homes and assisted living facilities.
Typical Duties:
- Preparing medications in specialty packaging (blister packs, unit-dose cards)
- Maintaining emergency kits
- Managing medication delivery to facilities
- Processing cycle fills
Key Takeaways
- Pharmacy technicians assist pharmacists in preparing and dispensing medications.
- Technicians cannot counsel patients, perform drug utilization review, or make clinical decisions.
- All technician work must be verified by a licensed pharmacist.
- Scope of practice varies by state and pharmacy setting.
- Common duties include medication preparation, inventory management, and billing.
Which of the following tasks can a pharmacy technician perform independently?
A patient asks the pharmacy technician about potential interactions between their new medication and their current drugs. The technician should:
In which pharmacy setting would a technician most likely prepare IV admixtures?