National Prescription Drug Take Back Day is October 23
Many of us have a medicine cabinet in our homes. It may contain first-aid supplies, personal hygiene items, prescription and over-the-counter medicines, and other personal needs.
Keep tabs on your medicines to help you keep them out of the wrong hands. Each year in the United States, more than 1 million people visit emergency departments for an adverse drug event. An adverse drug events (ADE) is when someone is harmed by a medicine.(1)
Blood thinners, antibiotics, diabetes drugs, and opioid analgesics are the leading cause of emergency department visits for ADEs.(2)
Practicing safe storage and proper disposal of prescription medicines can help keep your family safe and healthy.
Up and Away
Toddlers can be harmed if they get into medicines when no adult is watching. Approximately 50,000 children younger than 5 years old go to emergency departments each year for an ADE.(3)
Emergency visits for kids and pets, too, are preventable if people put medicines up and away after every use. Here are some safe medicine storage practices:
Put medicine and vitamins up and away and out of children’s reach and sight.
Put medicine and vitamins away every time.
At home or away, keep medicines in their original, child-resistant containers.
Never leave loose pills or liquid medicine out on a counter, table, or child’s bedside.
Lock the safety cap.
Teach your children about medicine safety.
Ask guests to keep purses, bags, or coats that have medicine in them out of children’s reach and sight when they are in your home.
Prepare for an emergency. Create an Emergency Action Plan that includes important contact information, such as phone numbers for your physician, pharmacist, veterinarian, and the Poison Control Center: 800-222-1222.(4)
Learn more about safe medicine storage.
Drug disposal
It’s important that you safely dispose of expired, unwanted, or unused prescription medicines. There are several ways to do that.
National Prescription Drug Take Back Day is a semiannual event held in October and April. The campaign teaches people how to dispose of medicines and provides safe and secure locations where they can dispose of their medicines.(5)
The best way to dispose of most types of medicines is to drop them off at a drug take back location.(6) This may be your local pharmacy or police station.
There are other drug disposal options if you cannot get to a Take Back Day location. Flush medicines on the FDA flush list down the toilet. If a child, adult, or pet in your home ingests, touches, misuses, or abuses a medicine on the flush list, they could suffer serious consequences or die.(7)
Dispose of medicines that are not on the flush list in your home trash.
Mix medicines (liquid or pills; do not crush tablets or capsules) with an unappealing substance such as dirt, cat litter, or coffee grounds.
Place the mixture in a container such as a sealed plastic bag.
Throw away the container in your trash at home.
Remove personal information from the label of empty medicine bottles and packaging. Throw away or recycle the bottle or packaging.(8)
Learn more about the safe disposal of medicines.
Resources
Public Health Matters: A Prescription for Preparedness
Medication Safety Basics
Up and Away Campaign
Drug Disposal: Questions and Answers
Patient Safety & Medication Storage
References
https://www.cdc.gov/medicationsafety/basics.html
https://www.cdc.gov/medicationsafety/program_focus_activities.html
https://www.cdc.gov/medicationsafety/parents_childrenadversedrugevents.html
https://www.cdc.gov/medicationsafety/protect/campaign.html
https://takebackday.dea.gov/
https://www.fda.gov/drugs/safe-disposal-medicines/disposal-unused-medicines-what-you-should-know
https://www.fda.gov/drugs/disposal-unused-medicines-what-you-should-know/drug-disposal-fdas-flush-list-certain-medicines
https://www.fda.gov/drugs/disposal-unused-medicines-what-you-should-know/drug-disposal-dispose-non-flush-list-medicine-trash