Any of you get "I know the owner" at an employee-owned store or a mega-corporate entity like Wal-Mart?
I work for a national drug store chain, and I once received "I don't appreciate that. I'll talk to Mr. [name] tomorrow", referring to our store manager.
The customer in question had left several large items sitting on the counter at our prescription drop-off window for approximately eight minutes, blocking the counter and thus making it impossible for patients dropping off prescriptions to use. What she didn't "appreciate" was me asking her not to do that in the future. Those eight minutes were one of the very rare stretches of time someone doesn't come up to that window (we're a 24-hour location, and the busiest pharmacy in the second-largest city in our state), but I didn't want that type of behavior to repeat. The store manager never talked to me about this incident.
A common scenario for me:
Me (to a brand-new patient): Do you have your insurance card with you?
Patient: No.
Me: Okay, the cash price for this prescription will be $49.99.
Patient: But I have a $10 co-pay.
Or, a common variation on that scenario:
Me: Your insurance doesn't cover this prescription. The cash price is $49.99.
Patient: But I have a $10 co-pay.
Another one that annoys me:
Me: How can I help you?
Customer: Yes, I'm picking up a prescription for John Smith.
Me: Could you verify the address, please?
Customer: I don't know the address.
Me: Could you verify the date of birth or phone number?
Customer: I don't know those, either.
Is it so hard to know something about the person for whom you are picking up a prescription?
My favorite, of course, is the omnipresent cell phone, because it's somehow my fault that I'm interrupting the person on the phone when they came to
me.
A fun one from a few weeks ago:
We had an allergy to penicillin listed on a patient's profile. She was picking up a prescription for Omncief, which is a cephalosporin. Cephalosporins have about a 5% or so cross-sensitivity to penicillins, so we obviously make sure to mention this to patients. The patient interrupted the pharmacist and very rudely snapped, "I know all about that. I'm a nurse. Just give me the damned prescription."
As if we were supposed to be able to read her mind and know she's a nurse...