Pharmacy operations

A real pharmacy workflow.

Pharmacist review. USP-aligned compounding. Label proofing. Release gates. Documentation. Not a product-fulfillment workflow — a pharmacy workflow.

Prescription readiness

What a pharmacist verifies before compounding.

Identity, prescriber license, prescription validity, drug, strength, formulation, route, and quantity. Patient chart for safety review. Allergies. Interactions. Plausibility check.

If anything is off, the pharmacist holds and contacts the prescribing doctor. The doctor remains the prescribing authority; the pharmacist has release authority.

Compounding under controls

USP-aligned, lot-tracked, label-proofed.

Compounding happens in defined environments per USP standards. Ingredients have known sources and assigned lot numbers. Each batch is documented. Labels are proofed before they reach a finished product.

Release happens only after the pharmacist signs off on the batch and the patient-specific prescription matches the compounded product. Quality and traceability →

Documentation

Structured, queryable, retained.

Pharmacy records are retained per state and federal requirements. They are structured (not paper trails across binders) and queryable when records requests come in.

Patient access to their own records is supported on request, in line with HIPAA.

Want depth?

Read about quality.

Ingredient sourcing, lot linkage, release checks.