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Wood — a native of
Tuscola — graduated from Tuscola Community High School in 1975. He
graduated from the St. Louis College of Pharmacy in 1980, with a
bachelor’s degree in pharmacy. He worked at Dillow Drugs n Shelbyville
for a year and Endris Pharmacy in Pana for three years. Wood then worked
at The Pharmacy in Tuscola from 1984 to 1991.
In 1991, Wood went to
work for Noel Dicks at Dicks Pharmacy in Arthur. Five years later, he
purchased the store from Dicks. Today the pharmacy continues to have an
old-fashioned soda fountain.
Wood is president of
the East Central Illinois Pharmacists Association, which covers nine
Illinois counties. He is also a member of the Illinois Pharmacists
Association and the National Community Pharmacists Association.
What led you to choose a career as a pharmacist?
I definitely wanted to do something in
the medical field, something where I could help people. There happened
to be an advertisement for one of the pharmaceutical schools on the
bulletin board in my high school and I decided it might not be too bad a
choice.
What do you find most enjoyable about your job?
The opportunity to help people and deal
with people. It’s definitely a different challenge from what I’d like
for it to be. I spend a lot of time with people’s insurance companies
finding out why they’re not paying bills as they should be — but that’s
still helping people.
What do you find most difficult about your job?
It’s difficult to keep up with everything
with all the new drugs coming out. I do go to continuing education
courses and do all kinds of reading. The most frustrating thing is
dealing with the third parties — plan benefit managers who dictate what
drugs are going to be covered and get filled on insurance plans.
What do you think is the most important quality for someone
considering a career in pharmacy?
It probably goes back to being able to
care about people and wanting to work with people — having the
compassion that allows you to care about people. That’s what keeps
pharmacists the number-one trusted profession — caring about people and
interacting with customers.
What advice would you give someone going into a career as a
pharmacist?
I think it’s going to continue to be a
good profession for some years to come. It takes a lot of perseverance;
it’s now at least a six-year program for all students. Right now, the
pay is very rewarding, but it takes a long time to get through it. I
thought the situation I had in high school — strong math, strong science
and Latin — was quite beneficial. Unfortunately, you’re not going to
find Latin at a lot of high schools, but it prepared me for physiology
terminology and being able to write as well.
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