its fine, but that is the cause with newer engines running water for oil so the longer they sit between startups the longer the oil has time to drip down into the pan.
I would suggest flooding the injectors (push the gas pedal to the floor) crank it for a few seconds to help get the oil pump circulate the oil. That is pretty much like priming the engine, it will crank and crank and crank but it wont turn over. Now dont ask me how to do that in a push button start car. I would imagine you floor the gas, hold the ignition button while holding your foot down, let go of the button and wait for it to stop cranking. Verify that process first though lol i did that on my miata only one time i rev'd that puppy on a cold start because i took my foot off the gas before i let go of the button. lol
Ultimately, the fate of the truck will fall under 1 condition, use it or lose it. I have 3 vehicles i jump between, 1 week was about the max i found i could let my ram sit before it did that. But obviously, if you just drive it it will go away.
Find an excuse to drive the truck every week at least for a solid 45 minutes. The best things you can do for a vehicle and the engine are this:
1. Limit idle time, letting a truck sit and warm up will destroy your piston rings over time (letting it idle in general is bad). Just get in and just drive it. Now dont floor it right after firing it up, drive under light load letting it warm up to operating temps then you can do as you please. Check your engine stats on the gauge cluster i always watch mine.
2. Drive the truck long enough to get it nice and hot. By nice and hot i mean you want the engine to be up to operating temp long enough that it can pretty much squeeze out the moisture inside the oil. Short drives kill engines too. Dont go racing around thinking thats what i mean by hot
3. Getting gas from "top tier detergent" stations are a plus, you always gotta make sure your fuel is good too.
4. Changing your oil more frequently wont help anything