PharmD's are not doctors!





Well as a drug rep you should know where the water bottles are as you are just a glorified waitress. As for the foot powder it is in aisle 2 next to the knee pads. You know the knees pad that you need when you go down on your customer or boss to keep your useless job.
At least your shoes look cute.
 




Well as a drug rep you should know where the water bottles are as you are just a glorified waitress. As for the foot powder it is in aisle 2 next to the knee pads. You know the knees pad that you need when you go down on your customer or boss to keep your useless job.
At least your shoes look cute.


And yet we make more money than you…
 












Right….and we MSLs are not memorizing lunch orders or worrying about samples reconciliations.


Nah you just keep calling your local rep to get access to the KOL said rep has known for years, the same KOL who won't see you since MSL turnover is extremely high so why make the investment? For the hopes you can talk about a clinical trial they most likely won't get, that is run by a CRO anyway so you really are just a messenger...oh let's not forget about your post conference/congress 'surveys' and any 'off label' MIRF questions...ya know all five of those a year take up a ton of time!

Sample reconciliation? What are you an MSL at a big pharma primary care company in the 90's? Most specialties do not take samples and if they do the are not rep delivered, and lunches are not all that often and when they take place there is no need to memorize anything, they are easily made on-line to a delivery service company. I never have to touch the food it's all set up when I arrive...so yeah, to make more money than an MSL for that extra 5 mins of effort is well worth it.
 




PharmDs have less schooling than a Chiropractor or an optomitrist. Less school than a master's prepared nurse practitioner. Less school than a master's prepared PA. But they feel comfortable calling themselves Doctor. Are you kidding me? I couldn't do it. I could not look someone directly in the eye and call myself a doctor. Have never TOUCHED a patient ever. Have never prescribed for a patient.
 








Is PharmD degree an absolute requirement for MSL?
Are there MD/DO or MD/PhD who didn't completed their US based schoolings and work as MSL or in Medical affairs?

I work in oncology and we use the term...'terminal degree' when posting for MSL jobs, so we have PharmD's, PhD's, MD/DO's(rare, but yes often time exUS trained physicians). In a few rarer instances we have NP's and PA's and every once in a while a nursing PhD with decades of clinical experience in major academic cancer centers.

Not sure how other therapeutic area work.
 




I work in oncology and we use the term...'terminal degree' when posting for MSL jobs, so we have PharmD's, PhD's, MD/DO's(rare, but yes often time exUS trained physicians). In a few rarer instances we have NP's and PA's and every once in a while a nursing PhD with decades of clinical experience in major academic cancer centers.

Not sure how other therapeutic area work.

In immunology here, and work about the same—but we have fewer NPs working on our team. Don’t think it means anything, because we haven’t had much turn-over and team was kept deliberately small so few openings. Things are getting weirder by the day in this business, and we’re working now with more commercial people (TLLs/FBMs/CNEs) than ever. Alphabet soup!