Jerry Fahrni

Pharmacy Informatics and Technology

  • Home
  • About
RSS

Taking advantage of your carousel space.

Posted on May 25, 2009 by Jerry Fahrni
4 CommentsLeave a comment

gapinshelvesI have posted many times on our system for barcoding medications in the pharmacy. The posts have included reference to our efforts to increase storage space.  Our goals have always been to store as many medications as possible within the carousel to take advantage of the software’s many safety features and inventory functionality. 

Like all pharmacy departments we have several medication items that do not require significant storage space. I am talking about items like ophthalmic drops, otic preparations, small ointments and creams and some injectable items that are stocked in small quantities secondary to expense and lack of use. 

Small bins for storing opthalmic preparations.

During installation of our carousels we noticed small gaps in the shelving units. We approached one of the White Systems engineers on site and inquired about the small gaps. I don’t recall exactly why they were there, but the small size made the space virtually useless. Fortunately for us, the Talyst consultant that was on site to help us with the installation process sat down with us to come up with a solution. It was a simple idea really, but quite ingenious.  We purchased small bins that fit perfectly into the empty spaces. The size of the bin limited their utility for storage, but worked nicely for the smaller items mentioned above. The addition of the smaller bins created several empty spaces in the larger bins, giving us significantly more storage. 

 

 

 


Categories: Automation, Barcoding | Tags: AutoPharm, Carousel, Talyst
Notice: This work is licensed under a BY-NC-SA. Permalink: Taking advantage of your carousel space.
EMRs as a tool for patient safety.
“What’d I miss?” -Week of May 18th

4 Responses to “Taking advantage of your carousel space.”

  1. Marni Alvarez says:
    May 26, 2009 at 10:14 am

    Great idea! What are the dimensions of your bins?

  2. Jerry Fahrni says:
    May 26, 2009 at 11:07 am

    Hi Marni – I believe the bins come from Herman Miller (A-size subcontainer) and are 2-3/16″ High x 13-13/16″ Deep x 2-1/4″ Wide.

  3. Masoomeh Khamesian says:
    August 28, 2009 at 10:26 am

    @Jerry Fahrni
    How do you handle the returns? We installed 2 Talyst carousels a month ago and our biggest issue now is how to handle the returns.
    Thanks, Masoomeh Khamesian,

  4. Jerry Fahrni says:
    August 28, 2009 at 11:39 pm

    Hi Masoomeh

    Well, our system is pretty simple. We use a small yellow bin located on the end of one the carousels to hold returns. As the technicians get time throughout the day they put the returned items back in the carousel. We do not have a cart fill and use Pyxis to dispense 90%+ of patient medications directly on the nursing units. If you use a cart fill process I suppose you would have significantly more returns than us. Feel free to contact me if you need more detail.

    Thanks for stopping by.
    Jerry

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

*


question razz sad evil exclaim smile redface biggrin surprised eek confused cool lol mad twisted rolleyes wink idea arrow neutral cry mrgreen

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

  • Tweet
  • Recent Posts

    • Evernote update for Android is awesome
    • Ideas, Vision, Innovation: Fantasy vs. Reality
    • News flash, not all docs happy with iPad in the hospital setting
    • Pharmacy student adherence to a simulated medication regimen
    • Thinking about pharmacy refrigerators
    • Android App: Tarascon Prescriber’s Essentials
    • Lexi-Drugs to include CHEST guideline and Beers Criteria
    • Medication reconciliation on an internal medicine unit in French hospital [Article]
    • Foiled again!
    • Pharmacy technician program standards draft from ASHP now available for comment
  • Blogroll

    • Apple Core Labs
    • Archetypical
    • Florence dot com
    • Health Care Product Management
    • Infusion Nurse Blog
    • Pharmacy Technology Resources
    • Rob Fahrni
    • RxINFORMATICA
    • RxInformatics
    • The Cynical Pharmacist
    • The Medicine Guy
    • The Student Pharmacist
    • Unnatural Language Processing
  • Categories

    • Automation (42)
    • Barcoding (61)
    • Cloud Computing (25)
    • Cool Technology (105)
    • CPOE (3)
    • Database (8)
    • EMR (31)
    • Hardware (5)
    • iPhone (17)
    • Medication Safety (80)
    • Mobile Computing (100)
    • None of the above (2)
    • Pharmacy Informatics (107)
    • Pharmacy Practice (22)
    • RFID (7)
    • Siemens (13)
    • Tablet PCs (50)
    • Technology (62)
    • Therapeutics (28)
    • Top Posts/Searches (28)
    • Uncategorized (85)
    • Web 2.0 (14)
    • What'd I miss (62)
© Jerry Fahrni. Proudly Powered by WordPress | Nest Theme by YChong