Ask An Alumnus – Scott A. Meyers, BS ’76, MS, RPh, FASHP
Scott A. Meyers, BS ’76, MS, RPh, FASHP Heading link
Scott A. Meyers
BS ’76, MS, RPh, FASHP
Executive Vice President, Illinois Council of Health-System Pharmacists
As the chief executive officer of ICHP, Scott Meyers is responsible for overseeing the day-to-day operations of the council, serves as a liaison to the Illinois State Board of Pharmacy, and is or has served as a member of the Dean’s Advisory Committee at the University of Illinois Chicago, Midwestern University, SIUE School of Pharmacy, Chicago State University, and Roosevelt University Colleges of Pharmacy. He is a member of the Board of Governors of the Pharmacy Technician Certification Board, Inc., which has certified over 700,000 pharmacy technicians nationally since 1995 and is currently its vice-chair. Meyers currently serves as a voting member and vice-chair of the Collaborative Pharmaceutical Task Force appointed by the Illinois General Assembly to address a variety of issues concerning updating the Illinois Pharmacy Practice Act and Rules
Q – As a pharmacist, how can I best prepare to adapt to the inevitable changes ahead in the next 20 years?
A – Be flexible and willing to take on new responsibilities. Always look to learn new things from new people, places, and experiences. Wherever you land, always look outside that environment to help find solutions to problems, answers to questions, and for friends who can help you and who you can help too! You can work at a place for 20 years and still be well informed and connected if you reach outside to others. But if you stay in one place and only look for solutions inside, you will eventually develop tunnel vision and lose perspective on future change.
Q – How does your pharmacy degree inform your leadership style?
A – Because I graduated 40 plus years ago, my degree made a huge impact on my early years within the profession. It taught me to serve my patients with compassion and caring. It taught me to consider alternatives when you hit a wall. And it taught me that the degree itself was merely the ticket into the game and that where I sat or what position I took on the field was up to me. It helped me choose to be a player and not just a spectator.
Q – What was the most important thing you learned while in pharmacy school? Who has influenced your career?
A – I’d like to say that it’s not what you know but who you know, but that’s not completely true. What I learned is that you don’t really know what you have to know until you get where you want to go. What I’m saying is that if you want to be a good clinical practitioner, you obviously need to know the therapies inside out, but if you want to be a great clinical practitioner, you also need to know how to treat patients, work well with coworkers, collaborate with physicians and administrators, and appreciate what everyone on the team contributes. If you want to be a good manager, you need to know how to manage people, but if you want to be a great leader, you need to have a vision, build up and trust your staff, and still retain enough clinical knowledge to understand what the patients need.
As for who influenced my career? Probably the first person was assistant dean Conrad Bloomquist, who convinced me to attend UIC COP when I was a freshman at U of I in Champaign-Urbana! He was a zoologist; he wasn’t even a pharmacist. But he was warm and caring, and we hit it off the first time we met. The most significant influence, though, from UIC and later from ASHP, was Dr. Henri Manasse. I think I had Henri as a professor in four or five classes my last year in school, and we truly connected. He made me stretch, work harder, and most importantly, think more than I probably would have for any other instructor. Then when he came to ASHP, he continued to engage me and encourage me and still does today. I’ve had many other influencers/mentors in my career, William Zellmer, David Lorms, Marcia Palmer, Bruce Dickerhofe, Sister Margaret Wright, Kevin Colgan, and more. Almost all of them because of my participation in ICHP as a member and staff!
Q – Do you have advice for our current student pharmacists?
A – Never say never. Very early in my career, I swore I would never work in another hospital and then ended up working almost all of my career there or close to it. Don’t pass up a chance to improve yourself just because you think you might not like it. Another important nugget is don’t burn any bridges in pharmacy. Don’t talk disparagingly about someone else in pharmacy unless you know who everyone is that can hear you! And then don’t do it anyway. You never know who you will need in the future of your career. Pharmacy is a very small world but with endless opportunities.
Q – What does it mean to you to be an alumnus of the UIC College of Pharmacy?
A – It means you have lots of alumni brothers and sisters all over Illinois and the country. Many of them well-respected leaders in the profession. It means that you made it through one of the best pharmacy schools in the nation. It means that your school has been around for a very long time and will be for much, much longer!
Q – What motivates you to support the college?
A – The college gave me a great education despite myself (it was the ’70s). UIC has been there my whole career, coming back within a year of graduation to gather information to share with my new hospital employer, through the years providing students for rotations at my various workplaces, offering great continuing education learning opportunities, and most importantly providing a place to network with my original pharmacy school classmates and friends. Some of my classmates, upperclassmen, and underclassmen have become some of the country’s most influential pharmacists, not to mention my friends. When I graduated, I had no thought that I would ever be this connected back to the U. and I am so glad I’m wrong! So the college gave me the foundation to build a great network of mentors, leaders, and friends. I have to give back to something that important in my life!