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CVS pharmacist returns from Matrix; can now download entire nursing curriculum into your brain in four hours!
See the original ad in Quicktime or Windows Media Player See the revised version in Quicktime or Windows Media Player The ad is/was one of a new series of CVS TV ads featuring apparently real pharmacists explaining their people-focused practice. In the ad in question, an earnest CVS pharmacist makes the following statement in a naturalistic, conversational
Of course, it's also new to us that you can become a nurse through a four-hour session with a pharmacist. In reality, nurses have at least three years of college-level education. And because pharmacy is a very different field, pharmacists would be qualified to provide very little of that training. If the public had a good understanding of nursing, Mr. Morgan's statements might be no big deal, perhaps no more than a revealing comment on the inadequate aftercare the short-staffed health care system often gives seriously ill patients. But because knowledge of nursing is so limited, we fear that many may conclude that a person actually could more or less duplicate the pharmacological knowledge of a nurse in a few hours. In fact, U.S. registered nurses typically receive at least two semesters of pharmacology, in addition to their years of training in other nursing science courses. Some nurses have noted that some viewers may also see the ad as a statement that nurses are failing to do their jobs. Of course, nurses provide expert teaching about issues including medications upon patients' discharge from hospitals, in home care settings, and elsewhere--if they have time. Today, they often do not because of short-staffing. And as a result of the same cost pressures, patients are being discharged in more fragile states of health than ever, which may mean they are trying to cope with even more complex medication regimens. But if you have no sense of that, it might seem reasonable to conclude that nurses are responsible for this patient's plight. We thank CVS for pulling and revising this ad. Please send letters of thanks to Mark Kolligian, VP of Customer Service at CVS by sending them to us at letters@nursingadvocacy.org and we will forward them on to him. Thank you! Click here to see the commercial in Quicktime.
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The URL for this page is www.nursingadvocacy.org/news/2006/jan/24_cvs.html |
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