New order
Approved catalog only
Patient context
J. Doe · DOB 01/15/1980 · Active
Compound
Hydrocortisone 10mg · Cream base
Dose
10mg BID
Quantity
30g
Refills
2
Submit order →
Pharmacy notified instantly
Providers spend time describing compounds in free text, checking out one patient at a time, calling pharmacies for status updates, and logging into separate portals for each pharmacy relationship.
Separate checkout required for every single patient
Orders faxed or called in with free-text compound descriptions
No visibility into order status after submission
Multiple disconnected portals with separate credentials
Back-and-forth calls to clarify what was actually ordered
Build custom compounds from the catalog in seconds
Cart-based bulk ordering: multiple patients, one submission
Real-time order status visible without calling the pharmacy
One environment for all pharmacy relationships
Structured orders reduce errors and eliminate re-work
Catalog-driven ordering
Build compounds from the approved catalog in seconds instead of free-text descriptions
Bulk ordering
Queue scripts for multiple patients and submit once — no per-patient checkout
Status visibility
Track orders from submission through fulfillment without calling the pharmacy
No portal fatigue
One environment replaces per-pharmacy portals and separate credentials
FAQ
Traditionally, providers order from compounding pharmacies via fax, phone, or portal forms that require free-text descriptions. With FullStackRX, providers select from the pharmacy's approved compound catalog with patient context already loaded. Orders are structured, reducing errors and eliminating the need for back-and-forth clarification.
Providers need to quickly find and order approved compounds, see patient history in context, track order status without calling the pharmacy, and avoid managing credentials for multiple portals. A good compounding pharmacy ordering system makes ordering feel like selection rather than composition.
Under 30 seconds. Providers build from the pharmacy's approved ingredients and options, so there is nothing to compose from scratch and nothing the pharmacy needs to interpret.
Yes. Providers add multiple scripts to a single cart and submit one bulk order. There is no per-patient checkout.