About us

WELCOME TO PHARMACY RX

about

The Pharmacy Rx vision is to provide speedy delivery of your prescription medications straight to your front door, all with as little hassle as possible. We envision a world where our clients can focus on getting well without any unnecessary struggle with their workers compensation insurance carriers.

Our prescription services offer a wide selection of resources. We will work with you to ensure that your prescription needs are met through our prescription processing. Our highly trained Pharmacists and Technicians are readily available to fill your prescription needs.

Very few people realize the complexity of what goes into filling prescriptions. Our comprehensive dispensing process involves a series of checks and balances created to ensure what the physician has ordered is exactly what we dispense and deliver. From initial receipt by the order-entry technician to the final pharmacist check to the onsite delivery, our team realizes the importance of dispensing medications accurately and getting medications out in a timely manner.

Beyond our dispensing prescriptions, our dedicated billing team is handling the charges to the prescription insurance carrier, whether it be Medicaid, Medicare Part D Drug Plan or private insurance, to ensure customers are receiving the optimal benefit of their healthcare dollars. Our billing team is always that intermediary working on behalf of our customers to ensure access to critical therapy.

How prescriptions are processed and filled:
  1. Your doctor prescribes a medicine for you at the doctor’s office by either writing a handwritten prescription or sending it electronically to our pharmacy.
  2. The pharmacist or pharmacy benefits manager (an organization that manages insurance coverage of medicines) checks your insurance plan to make sure the medicine prescribed is covered by your insurer.
  3. Your health insurer will make one of the following decisions so that you can get your medicine.
  4. You get the medicine your doctor prescribed; by making the co-payment outlined in your insurance plan.
  5. You can get the medicine your doctor prescribed but it requires a higher co-pay or you have to pay a percentage of the medicine’s cost, called co-insurance.
  6. You can receive a medicine that has similar benefits and is less expensive to you and your health insurer, but it is not a generic equivalent to what medicine you were prescribed.
  7. Your insurer would like you to try a different medicine that you must fail before the insurance company will pay for the medicine your doctor prescribed.
  8. The pharmacist will communicate to you what medicine you can have and how much it will cost to you. Now you must decide which medication to choose based on your doctor’s recommendation, the cost to you and other factors that may be important to you. You may want to consult with your doctor to help make this decision.
  9. Once a decision has been made, you pick up the prescription at the pharmacy or have it mailed to you. In some instances, the pharmacist may not know how much you’re paying for the medicine until the prescription has been filled by them and charged at the register.