Houston Chronicle

Pharmacies ramp up hiring to give shots

Jobs are plentiful as chains recruit for COVID vaccinatio­ns

- By Rebecca Robbins

Phones are ringing with plentiful job opportunit­ies. Prospectiv­e employers are dangling five-figure signing bonuses. Businesses are hounding universiti­es for potential recruits.

The job market is booming — at least if you’re a pharmacist.

The U.S. vaccinatio­n drive is entering a new phase this week with the start of a federal program that will send more doses of COVID-19 vaccines into drugstores and grocery store pharmacies.

In preparatio­n, pharmacy chains are in the middle of a hiring spree, competing to quickly recruit pharmacist­s and support staff to inoculate customers.

Pharmacies are turning to universiti­es for help finding vaccinator­s. Training programs are enrolling record numbers of students and workers looking to learn how to give vaccines. And pharmacist­s like Maurice Shaw have been inundated with job opportunit­ies.

“For a two-week period, the same numbers kept calling and calling and calling,” said Shaw, who lives near Springfiel­d, Ill. “It’s like the job market flipped overnight.”

Starting Thursday, the federal government will send vaccine doses directly to dozens of chains that operate drugstores and grocery store pharmacies. The chains will play a key role as the vaccinatio­n campaign, which so far has been concentrat­ed in hospitals and mass vaccinatio­n sites like stadiums, expands into places where many Americans are accustomed to getting shots.

The big chains need trained profession­als not only to administer shots but also to perform other tasks like filling syringes, signing people in, answering questions, documentin­g the doses given and monitoring people for side effects.

Rite Aid is trying to fill more than 2,000 pharmacy jobs. Kroger said in December that it planned to hire nearly 1,000 health care workers; it has already hired hundreds this year. Hy-Vee said in December that it was recruiting 1,000 pharmacy technician­s who traditiona­lly have served as support staff but, thanks to a recent regulatory change, are now able to administer vaccines in many states.

CVS and Walgreens — which already have been giving shots in nursing homes and other longterm care facilities and have recently begun to offer vaccines in stores in some states — have announced the most ambitious hiring targets.

CVS late last year met a hiring target it announced in October of 15,000 such employees and has since hired thousands of additional pharmacist­s and pharmacy technician­s, said T.J. Crawford, a spokespers­on. He said CVS would keep hiring as the vaccine supply rose and more stores offered shots.

Walgreens aimed for 9,000 pharmacist­s, pharmacy technician­s and nurses. It has filled 7,500 slots.

“We are getting so many individual­s to come and raise their hand,” said Rina Shah, a Walgreens executive who oversees pharmacy operations and services.

At Washington State University’s College of Pharmacy and Pharmaceut­ical Sciences, officials have been hearing from pharmacies asking for help publicizin­g job openings. The pharmacies also want the names of students, recent graduates and pharmacist­s looking to return to the workforce after time away.

“It’s all over the board,” said Linda Garrelts MacLean, a vice dean at the pharmacy college. “We have seen large chains, small local chains, independen­t pharmacies reaching out to us.”

One of the flyers that the college agreed to distribute was from Walgreens. It advertises signing bonuses of $500 for pharmacy technician­s and up to $10,000 for pharmacist­s.

Shaw already had a full-time job as a pharmacist for the University of Illinois at Chicago College of Pharmacy. But he received a flurry of pitches to join the COVID-19 vaccinatio­n effort from recruiters for pharmacy chains who reached out via phone, texts, emails and LinkedIn messages.

“Will you (or someone you know) consider joining us for this important health care mission?” asked a text message from CVS in December. “You can help us bring people back together again,” said a solicitati­on email from CVS. A recruiter working with Walgreens texted him about a position that would pay up to $65 an hour, plus benefits.

Shaw signed on with CVS to give out vaccines on weekends, earning about $51 an hour, while keeping his full-time job. He said getting involved felt like his duty.

“If you’re in the Army and war breaks out, are you going to say, ‘No, I’m going to sit this one out’?” he said.

Many of the new pharmacy jobs, like Shaw’s with CVS, are temporary, part-time stints.

Pharmacist­s and pharmacy technician­s must be trained to administer vaccines. Pharmacist­s go through a three- or four-year graduate program, which currently includes immunizati­on training. Pharmacy technician­s do not have specific degree requiremen­ts, but many complete monthslong certificat­ion programs or are trained on the job. To administer vaccines, pharmacy technician­s and pharmacist­s who did not get training in school need to enroll in a specialize­d training program run by groups like the American Pharmacist­s Associatio­n.

Enrollment has surged in the associatio­n’s immunizati­on training programs, with pharmacies typically paying the fees. About 9,000 student and midcareer pharmacist­s enrolled in one version of the program in December and January, compared with 2,600 in the same period a year ago.

“Since the vaccine got approved, our numbers have just gone through the roof,” said Scott Knoer, the associatio­n’s chief executive.

Pharmacy technician­s, too, are in high demand. Until recently, only a few states allowed the technician­s to give shots. But the Trump administra­tion in October issued guidance authorizin­g them to administer COVID-19 vaccines under the supervisio­n of a pharmacist.

While not all vaccine providers are letting technician­s give the shots, the regulatory change is creating thousands of new vaccinator­s.

Shah, the Walgreens executive, said the combinatio­n of the chain’s hiring and the rule change meant Walgreens would have about 45,000 employees nationwide who could provide COVID-19 vaccines, up from nearly 27,000 pharmacist­s.

 ?? Matias J. Ocner / Tribune News Service ?? Antonio Castro receives the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine from Walgreens pharmacy intern Erika Blanco at an assisted living facility in Kendall, Fla., last month.
Matias J. Ocner / Tribune News Service Antonio Castro receives the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine from Walgreens pharmacy intern Erika Blanco at an assisted living facility in Kendall, Fla., last month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States