The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Gwinnett school, CVS build pharmacy lab

Collaborat­ion with national chain is 2nd in U.S., teaches tech skills.

- By Arlinda Smith Broady abroady@ajc.com

The new mock lab will provide Shiloh High School students with hands-on training.

A Gwinnett County education program is converging with business interests as a way to give students immediate work skills or prepare them for higher education.

Shiloh High School cut the ribbon on its mock pharmacy lab Thursday. With assistance from the CVS Pharmacy chain, the new lab will provide students enrolled in the school’s Wellness Health and Education Academy with hands-on training.

Students will learn to receive prescripti­on orders, process orders, confirm medical coverage and fill prescripti­ons. Through the pharmacy tech program, students can earn college credits, and graduates are eligible to test for the Pharmacy Technician Certificat­ion with the GaPTCB-Georgia Pharmacy Technician Certificat­ion Board.

“My mom is a nurse practition­er and I’ve always wanted to do something in the medical field,” said senior Mark Everette. “This is giving me a good head start on my future.”

The Snellville school is the second in the nation and the only

one in the Southeast to provide students with processes and practices of a real pharmacy, said Michael Romesburg, with CVS Workforce Initiative­s.

“We normally set up a partnershi­p at technical schools and high schools where students come in (to a pharmacy) for a non-paid ‘externship­s,’ ” he said. “It’s a recruiting tool to allow the potential employees to learn our systems and to let us see them in action.”

When Romesburg met Dr. Krystal Tomlin, Gwinnett County health care science cluster coach, at a conference for future health profession­als, she inquired about internship programs. But Romesburg asked if she’d be interested in going one better — putting the pharmacy in the school.

“The (U.S.) Department of Education already had the curriculum in place,” Tomlin said. “We just needed to find a way to make it happen.”

In an already overcrowde­d school, space was precious. An abandoned locker room used for storage was transforme­d.

“It’s amazing that so much came from a simple, ‘Hello my name is .... ,’” said Tomlin.

Now 25 students can graduate high school and begin working in a growing field. Or those who have other aspiration­s, such as medical school, will receive the groundwork to become pharmacist­s, nurses or doctors.

As an academy, teaching practical skills is why Shiloh exists.

“One of our main goals is to prepare students for the real world,” said principal Danyel Dollard.

“The four academies allow them to focus on specific areas of concentrat­ion while they’re still in high school.”

That fact that they can earn a living wage while furthering their education was quite appealing to students handing out Smarties in pill bottles.

Classmate Jennifer Lopez said she plans to eventually enroll in Emory Medical School with her eye toward becoming a doctor.

The in-school pharmacy also helps students get past a barrier.

“With (federal) laws and legal issues, we can’t have high school students in the hospital pharmacy,” said Susan R. Powell, a nurse and profession­al developmen­t specialist at Gwinnett Medical Center

“This type of set-up is perfect for us because we’ll have a pool of qualified pharmacy techs right from the area.”

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Students of the Wellness Health and Education Academy at Snellville’s Shiloh High School hand out medicine bottles filled with candy during a ribbon-cutting ceremony for a new mock pharmacy lab, Feb. 15. Pharmacy tech students will earn college credit...
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Students of the Wellness Health and Education Academy at Snellville’s Shiloh High School hand out medicine bottles filled with candy during a ribbon-cutting ceremony for a new mock pharmacy lab, Feb. 15. Pharmacy tech students will earn college credit...
 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Dr. Krystal Tomlin, health care science coach for Gwinnett County Public Schools, shows off the pill-sized candy pieces she’ll use for teaching.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Dr. Krystal Tomlin, health care science coach for Gwinnett County Public Schools, shows off the pill-sized candy pieces she’ll use for teaching.
 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / AJC.COM ?? The mock pharmacy lab at Shiloh High School. “One of our main goals is to prepare students for the real world,” said principal Danyel Dollard.
ALYSSA POINTER / AJC.COM The mock pharmacy lab at Shiloh High School. “One of our main goals is to prepare students for the real world,” said principal Danyel Dollard.

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