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Horrible Experience at Rite Aid
Posted Sat January 31, 2009 12:00 pm, by Kim C. written to Rite Aid
Write a Letter to this Company
This letter is featured on Mommage
Location: Rite Aid on Sunset Ave in Rocky Mount, NC.
My daughter went to the Dr. and was diagnosed with a rare form of tonsilitis on Tuesday 1-27-09. The Dr. requested she be put the medication Omnisef until the test results came back and they could figure out want was going on. The Dr.'s office used e-scripts (whice sends a prescription via e-mail). I went through the drive thru at Rite Aid to pick up the prescription and asked the cashier at the window of the pharmacy if that medicine could be flavored. She threw the phone down and walked to the back to consult with the pharmacist and comes back and states "for an additional $3.00". I said that was fine and was aked what flavor. I responded "Grape". Needless to say when I arrived home and gave my daughter the first dose approximantly an hour later, it was not "grape" flavor, but "banana" flavored.
Thinking it was merely a mistake, I went back to Rite-Aid very calmly I might add and informed them there was a mistake in filling the prescription. We asked that it be grape and what I got was banana. The pharmacist then prints off a printout "proving" grape was added. That did not satisy me because the medicine was not grape but banana. The bottle could have been ectasy in a bottle for a monkey I'm sure, but it does not do well with a 7 year old who despises the taste of bananas on a good day!
I gave the pharmacist 3 choices to make it right: 1.Re-fill it with grape flavoring, 2. Give the prescription back and I would go elsewhere or 3. Give me my money back and I would call the Dr. to fax another prescription (somewhere else). She would not because I had already paid for and picked up the presription.
While in Rite Aid I called our Dr. to inform her what was going on and she states "They have had problems with Rite Aid in the past" and to call her office in the morning and they would get another prescription faxed over elsewhere in the morning. Needless to say, I did so and was able to get the Grape flavored from CVS. My daughter is much happier and happily taking her medicine!
I write this to let you know that in these tight financial times, as stores close their doors across the US, I will never ever under any circumstances shop at your store again. I plan on telling my friends, relatives, and neighbors of the horrible experience I endured, and will encourage all of them to patronize another store, just a few miles away. (Where, by the way, the flavoring is free, not $3).
As I have already sent you a letter via your web-site and complained to the Better Business Bureau, I want you to train your employees so they know how to handle cutomer service issues.
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by Rockin Animal Posted Fri February 6, 2009 @ 6:45 PM
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I too was given the wrong prescription, coincidently from Rite Aid. I was prescribed an antibiotic and a painkiller(vicodin) at the same time. I did not look carefully at the pills and began taking the prescribed doses. I noticed during my son's football game that I really felt loopy. That's when I looked at
the pills and realized that both bottles had been filled with vicodin. I was double dosing on the painkillers. This was while I lived in Oregon. I brought it to the pharmacists attention, and of course they apologized and gave me the right rx's. Funny thing is, 12 years later, living in California, I had the exact same thing happen with the Rite Aid here for the same meds! Needless to say, I will NEVER
have a prescription filled at Rite Aid again. Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me.
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by Underdog Posted Fri February 6, 2009 @ 1:53 PM
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I like a banana when it has just a touch of green still but that's it.
In pudding or a popsicle,putrid -now think of a thick syrup maybe even with bitterness.
You should get what you ask and pay for and yes I would flavor it for free if it were up to me.
Another big chain gave me the wrong Rx one day.I had plates removed from my ankle and it was supposed to be for Tylenol with codeine.
I got home with my new baby and before taking it looked it up in the home prescrip book and it didn't match so I called the pharmacy,they wern't sure what they had given me and asked me to bring it back.
When he finally determined what the pill was and looking at my history screen he looked sick and said "I am so glad you called and chose not to take this,it's penicillin"
The last time I had that I wnet into anaphalactic shock and almost died so imagine home alone with a new born until my 8 year old came home at 3:30 or my husband at 4:30.
There's no doubt in my mind that was divine intervention that made me check it out and maybe so in your case too.
The Providence of God
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by Rockin Animal Posted Fri February 6, 2009 @ 6:42 PM
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I too was given the wrong prescription, coincidently from Rite Aid. Mine however, was not something that would have been life threatening as your was. I was prescriped an antibiotic and a painkiller (vicodin) at the same time. I, unlike you, did not look carefully at the pills and began taking the prescribed doses. I noticed during my son's football game that I really felt loopy. That's when I looked at the pills and realized that both bottles had been filled with vicodin. I was double dosing on the painkillers. This was while I lived in Oregon. I brought it to the pharmacists attention, and of course they appologized and gave me the right rx's. Funny thing is, 12 years later, living in California, I had the exact same thing happen with the Rite Aid here for the same meds! Needless to say, I will NEVER have a prescription filled at Rite Aid again. Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me.
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by Zan Posted Mon February 2, 2009 @ 4:50 PM
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Yeah, when I was a kid I had to swallow nasty medicine too. And yeah, it made me better. Does that mean my son shouldn't be allowed to have medicine that tastes better and makes being sick just a little more tolerable, because the nasty stuff works just as well? Years ago they didn't have a polio vaccine either, and many people survived without ever having polio. But you can be darn sure my kid has been vaccinated for it.
But all of this is beside the point. The OP paid for something she didn't get. She is entitled to a refund.
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Bingo
by Lisa H. Mon February 2, 2009 @ 5:35 PM
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WRONG AID
need I say more?
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I love bananas, green ones, but I hate anything that smells like banana or that has been flavored to taste like bananas. I'd never be able to take medicine that was banana-flavored, even as an adult.
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by myswtghst Posted Mon February 2, 2009 @ 2:09 PM
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I have to agree with a lot of the comments below. While it may not be the end of the world for her daughter to take icky-tasting medicine, she paid for a service and did not receive it.
At the base level, she has a very valid complaint, expected a reasonable response, and instead was given attitude. While I understand that there may have been issues with "returning" medicine, given that a RX was required, and for all the pharmacist knew, the bottle had been refilled with water, the pharmacy should have AT LEAST offered to return the OP's $3, since the wrong flavoring was added.
Good luck, Kim, and I hope you get a positive response!
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Kids are finicky about medications to begin with so having them flavored is a good idea.
You had every right to get your money back. I would have opened the bottle and had the pharmacist smell the medicine to prove it was not grape flavored.
I am not so sure about the $3.00 charge as I see these signs posted with this charge and a listing of available flavors posted at many a pharmacy - even CVS.
Its just a way to make money because it costs next to nothing to put the flavoring in these meds as only one concentrated drop is used.
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by SueNY Posted Mon February 2, 2009 @ 3:24 AM
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I believe one of the reasons medicines aren't supposed to taste good is because of fears children will mistake them for candy.
I am old enough to remember when there was such a thing as children's aspirn and I also remember how it tasted exactly like the stuff in pixie sticks!
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by Cherry O. Posted Sun February 1, 2009 @ 8:20 PM
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My instinct is to say that you may have overreacted a tad (the BBB? really?), but I do agree that you should have gotten what you paid for--and, if a mistake was made, they should have cheerfully and apologetically corrected it. Good job on thinking to call your doctor and rectify the situation rather than stewing and whining about it; that was smart and responsible.
Perhaps, when persuading everyone you know to stay away from Rite-Aid, you could explain that they made a mistake and refused to acknowledge or correct it, rather than focusing on how much your daughter hates bananas. :-)
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by Nicole F. Posted Sun February 1, 2009 @ 5:50 PM
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I agree with the OP and I think RiteAid should have corrected their mistake.
I don't know if anyone on here has had tonsillitis...the kid is probably already miserable enough without having to gulp down stuff that tastes gross. I had chronic tonsillitis as a child that got so bad I ended up having my tonsils and adenoids removed...it was a miserable couple of months before then.
I would have given anything for any of my medicine to come in better flavors. One medicine I was supposed to take post surgery was so disgusting that I would always spit it out when my parents weren't looking...of course, this led to me getting an infection.
Riteaid should have fixed the mistake or given the OP their money back...it's only fair and right.
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by Donno Posted Sun February 1, 2009 @ 10:49 AM
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On the one hand, years from now your child will be grateful for everything you did for her whenever she was ill. When I was 15, I got an extremely bad sunburn that caused my skin to bubble up head to toe in softball-sized blisters. I could not bear to have even the weight of a sheet on me. Against my will, my mother scooped me out of bed and plunged me into a tub filled with cold weather. Bad medicine of a sort.
Yes, the people of previous generations were put through all kinds of home remedies, bad tasting medicine, etc. We lived and most are also probably very grateful for what our parents did for us. Your daughter would soon understand why you had to give her banana flavored medicine, but the fact is you should get what you paid for.
Someone pointed out this is expensive medication. If that is the case, the pharmacist should be more careful with it and avoid stupid mistakes.
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First, to the commentators who are saying medicine isn't supposed to taste "good" but is supposed to work, I think you missed the part of the letter where the OP said her child hates the taste of bananas. It's hard enough getting a child to down icky tasting medicine and it only adds insult to injury when it comes flavored with something you hate.
Second, if manufacturers can make medicine that tastes better than "medicine", why not take advantage of it? Personally, I'm thrilled I can get medicine for my kid in different flavors. Progress rules!
Third, I agree with the OP's letter, and I think her solutions for the pharmacy to make it right were reasonable. While I realize they wouldn't want to take the hit on taking back medication they couldn't resell, it was still their mistake. What if they had given her the wrong actual medicine? Would their resolution of "too bad" still be acceptable?
And as for the flavoring, if I had paid an extra $3 for it (which I think is ridiculous), you darn well better believe I'd expect to get what I paid for.
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by Blackrack Posted Sun February 1, 2009 @ 8:10 AM
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I was a pretty sick kid until the age of four, and whatever medicine didn't taste horrible was the stuff being pumped through an IV. More recently, I have memories of nearly puking after swigging back a dose of Buckley's (but I will never let it be said that stuff will not stop a cough in its tracks).
That being said, because you paid extra for the flavouring, the least they could have done was gotten it right. But on the other side of the coin, what if it hadn't come in grape flavouring? Or no flavouring at all? What happens when your daughter grows out of the tasty medicine and has to start taking the northern favourite of brown colouring, sap, and wintergreen?
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by olie Posted Sat January 31, 2009 @ 6:12 PM
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First, I agree with Wolf. We've taken disgusting-tasting meds for all our lives. Your daughter should be able to do so. What would Omnicef have tasted like without the flavoring? You may have made it worse. You could do what my parents did--give your daughter a few bites of ice cream to numb her taste buds beforehand, and a few to wipe out the gross flavor after. Plus, the ice cream would feel good on her tonsils.
Second, you did indeed pay for something you didn't receive. But the $3 also includes the pharmacy's costs to store the flavoring and put in the proper amount. It's great that CVS will provide flavoring for free, but you were warned of the cost before Rite Aid added it.
I checked out this medication at drugstore.com. It appears to be quite expensive. "In these tight financial times", Rite Aid can't very well be dumping an expensive bottle of medication. They can't refund it and put it back on the shelf for someone else.
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by Wolf Posted Sat January 31, 2009 @ 5:45 PM
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Medicine is not supposed to taste good. It is just supposed to WORK. If it works, who cares what it taste like. I choked down loads of meds when I was a kid. I have had to hold down my son a few times to get him to take stuff. If it works, and makes you daughter feel better THAT is what matters. NOT the taste. You paid more when you didn't have too.
When I was a kid, I took what my mom gave me or had to suffer through it. MAKE her take the FIRST one. I would have NEVER gotten more for my child. If it WORKS that is all that matters!
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LOL!
by Cherry O. Sun February 1, 2009 @ 8:12 PM
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