California's prison medical services are staffed by approximately 2,000 healthcare professionals, including doctors, nurses, and pharmacists. Additionally, there is a significant number of administrative staff supporting these operations. The exact number can vary as staffing levels change based on needs and budgets. For precise figures, consulting the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) or recent reports would provide the most accurate information.
Yes, as do nurses and pharmacists.
Please rephrase this as a question. I don't understand what you're asking.
A lot. But less than for doctors.
doctors, pharmacists, and veternarian?
architects, nurses, doctors, math teachers, pharmacists, etc.
SPF 20
The pharmacists dispense drugs based on what doctors prescribe for their patients.
In keeping with the jokes, pharmacists will tell you that doctors handwriting is barly legible
Cook, chemists, pharmacists, anything to do with money, doctors, architects; anything which requires measuring.
Doctors, Lawyers, Pharmacists, and if you have the talent then try Acting, Singing and some Major Sport.
Alright... so what would the doctors do if there were no medicines??? The pharmacists are the backbone for the health sciences... No Pharmacist, no medicines...
"Rx" means "prescription for medicine." The letters abbreviate the Latin word recipe, which is a form of the verb "to take."Doctors write Rx in the heading of prescriptions as an instruction to "take" the medicine. The pharmacists filling the orders understand this shorthand (and hopefully they can read the doctors' handwriting) and print it on pill bottles with whatever else doctors order, such as "take twice daily with food." Somewhere along the line, pharmacists started using "Rx" on their storefront signs so patients knew where to get their doctors' instructions translated.