First off, to "call in a prescription" you must be a valid Medical Doctor or representative. In the USA any Schedule 3 or above medication can be called in to a pharmacy. It would not be legal to disclose how to call one in, as you should know if you are able to.
You can call your pharmacy at home and they can call the pharmacy in the state you are in and transfer your prescription. Then they will fill it. Or you could call your doctor and they can phone in a prescription to the new out of state pharmacy.
you call your doctor or the pharmacy.
You can either call your doctor's office to verify this, or call the pharmacy you use. Otherwise, the pharmacy might notify you when they fill the prescription.
call and ask for pharmacy manager.
You could call your pharmacy or health care provider to see if you can get a small amount of your prescription transferred to a pharmacy at your location, or you could visit an urgent care center, pay for a visit, and get a replacement prescription.
Generally yes. You must either have an active prescription on file with the pharmacy with refills, or the doctor's office must call it in.
Introduce them self then read the prescription
A diet prescription is a prescription your doctor gives you to give to a pharmacy to get medicine
He could call his doctor in his home state home and ask him to forward a copy of the prescription. He could get a doctor at the clinic to get him a few days supply. The best would be to have the pharmacy and/or a doctor call his doctor or the pharmacy that he uses to verify the prescription.
By getting a prescription for it from your doctor and presenting the prescription at your pharmacy
Absolutely. There is a database that is easily accessible to healthcare professionals that shows what medicine you received, the doctor that prescribed it, the pharmacy where the prescription is filled, the date the prescription was filled and the date the prescription was filled. This is especially great for catching prescription drug abusers or sellers.
Yes, of course you can. You can take your prescription to a diffrerent pharmacy and you don't even have to tell them you have insurance. You can specifically ask that your pharmacy doesnt submit your prescription through insurance... but they still might inform them or at least inform the doctor. They do that to make sure you are not getting a controlled substance too soon. But if you are worried about it, just have the doctor call in that medication to a different pharmacy or have them give you the prescription and you take it to any pharmacy you want. When they ask you if you have insurance, so no. Hope that helps. :)