On the latest episode of The Mortar & Pestle, PCCA member Saad Dinno of Acton Pharmacy shares what compounding means to him. Here’s a sneak peek — listen to the full episode at bit.ly/mp-episode6 or wherever you listen to podcasts.
“There was a one-and-a-half year old Leukemia patient, newly diagnosed, at Boston Children's Hospital, but she was getting treatment at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston. The mom and the dad, every week, had to go in to get the medicine that was being compounded at the pharmacy. So the mom came to us — this was in 2003, 2002 — and the mom said, “We have a one-and-a-half year old girl with Leukemia, and we need this medicine. Can you compound it?” And I said yeah, sure, let me look into it for you, just give me a couple of hours. Of course, I called Dana-Farber first, then I called PCCA second, the [Pharmacy] Consulting Department, and I said I have this little girl that needs this medicine. Well, there was a formula in the PCCA Formula Database, so I took a look at it, we made some adjustments due to her age and such, and the mom came in two days later and picked up the medicine. And she said, “You don’t understand what this has done. Because you’re able to do this, I can concentrate on my girl instead of driving to Boston, an hour each way, to go grab this medicine.”...Now the girl is 16 years old, comes into my pharmacy still, to this day, walks in, gives me a hug. And the mom, to this day — even though honestly, I was just doing my job. As a compounding pharmacist, I was doing my job, taking care of a patient. She still thanks me to this day. To this day, they still thank me for taking care of her at that time.... What can I say? Stories like that, because of compounding, they never leave you. I mean, talk about personalized. That’s as personalized as it gets.”