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Jesse McCullough

Founder, Keystone Pharmacy Insights

Author Profile

Jesse McCullough is the founder at Keystone Pharmacy Insights, Cochranton, Pennsylvania, and a frequent presenter at Pharmacy U.

ARTICLES BY THIS AUTHOR

  • 10/1/2024

    Compliance or adherence in the world of pharmacy

    In the world of medications, we want patients to take their appropriately prescribed medications regularly to obtain the intended benefit. Is this done through compliance or adherence? The intent of the two terms is the same, but the spirit is entirely different. And it’s the spirit that counts in the end when leading patients to take their medications.
  • 9/27/2024

    Are you developing the pharmacy talent around you?

    Make no mistake, as leaders, it is important to develop the people around us. This is not limited to support staff. It also includes helping to develop our peers and even the people we report to. When we develop people, we increase the overall capacity of the organization, and we instill an increased feeling of ownership with our team members.
  • 9/17/2024

    What my neighbour’s peach trees can teach us about pharmacy leadership

    Earlier in my career, I served on a team that was to develop new revenue streams for our pharmacies. Anything that was not traditional dispensing was labelled “clinical” and given to our team to work through. In those days, we set out to participate in as many of these projects as possible.
  • 9/10/2024

    Pharmacists and Superman have more in common than you think

    For decades, pharmacists have been listed among the most trusted professionals. That trust comes from character. It comes from heart. It comes from having access to all sorts of powerful tools (medications) and making sure they are used to their greatest benefit!
  • 9/3/2024

    3 ways pharmacists can leverage charisma to improve their leadership

    By developing our charisma as a learned skill, we can have a greater impact on the people we encounter. Given so many of the headwinds that pharmacists face, developing this skill can pay huge dividends. Here are a few ways we can develop our charisma.
  • 8/27/2024

    How your mindset affects your pharmacy performance

    Acute and chronic treatments go beyond health conditions. They also apply to many of the activities throughout life. People who bring an acute mentality to their physical fitness will likely not experience the same results as those who bring a chronic mindset to the same situation. How does this relate to pharmacy practice? A prime example is in the area of medication adherence.
  • 8/20/2024

    Aim your pharmacy business to get a result

    I was working at the pharmacy in Conneaut Lake, Pennsylvania many years ago. We had a brand-new (remodelled) store, and we now had a drive-thru. As we adjusted to life with a drive-thru, I had one technician who struggled to use the comms system at the drive-thru and felt it was more appropriate (and convenient) to try to communicate with our patients and customers THROUGH the glass window. She would literally yell through the glass.
  • 8/13/2024

    What does uphill leadership mean to your pharmacy?

    We all want to get to better places, don’t we? What those better places look like will differ from one person to the next. Everyone has uphill dreams. Sadly, though, many have downhill habits that interfere with achieving those dreams. This is where good leadership becomes so valuable. The leader must define where the team is going and then help them get to that place.
  • 8/6/2024

    What does the pharmacy business mean to you?

    Pharmacies are MORE than a place where medications are dispensed. But far too many pharmacists are married to a definition like this. When I ask pharmacy students what pharmacists do, I get a response like: “Pharmacists are the medication experts.” That may very well be true. But pharmacists are so much more.
  • 7/30/2024

    What hockey taught me about pharmacy leadership

    Leadership skills can be learned. These are skills that anyone and everyone can learn and should learn! These are skills that can reduce or eliminate the problems we face every day in our pharmacy lives. But for the most part we are left to learn the lessons on our own. As a result, we find ourselves playing in a game where we do not know the rules, and we become frustrated.