How to Dispose of Unused Medicines
Is your medicine cabinet filled with
expired drugs or medications you no longer use? How should you dispose of them?
Most drugs can be thrown in the household
trash, but consumers should take certain precautions before tossing them out,
according to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). A few drugs should be
flushed down the toilet. And a growing number of community-based
"take-back" programs offer another safe disposal alternative.
Guidelines for Drug Disposal
FDA worked with the White House Office of
National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) to develop the first consumer guidance for
proper disposal of prescription drugs. Issued by ONDCP in February 2007 and
updated in October 2009, the federal guidelines are summarized here:
·
Follow any
specific disposal instructions on the drug label or patient information that
accompanies the medication. Do not flush prescription drugs down the toilet
unless this information specifically instructs you to do so.
·
Take advantage of
community drug take-back programs that allow the public to bring unused drugs
to a central location for proper disposal. Call your city or county
government's household trash and recycling service (see blue pages in phone
book) to see if a take-back program is available in your community. The Drug
Enforcement Administration, working with state and local law enforcement
agencies, is sponsoring National Prescription Drug Take Back Days throughout
the United States.
·
If no
instructions are given on the drug label and no take-back program is
available in your area, throw the drugs in the household trash, but first:
o Take them out of their original
containers and mix them with an undesirable substance, such as used coffee
grounds or kitty litter. The medication will be less appealing to children and
pets, and unrecognizable to people who may intentionally go through your trash.
o Put them in a sealable bag, empty can, or
other container to prevent the medication from leaking or breaking out of a
garbage bag.
FDA's Deputy Director of the Office of
Compliance Ilisa Bernstein, Pharm.D., J.D., offers some additional tips:
·
Before throwing
out a medicine container, scratch out all identifying information on the
prescription label to make it unreadable. This will help protect your identity
and the privacy of your personal health information.
·
Do not give
medications to friends. Doctors prescribe drugs based on a person's specific
symptoms and medical history. A drug that works for you could be dangerous for
someone else.
·
When in doubt
about proper disposal, talk to your pharmacist.
Bernstein says the same disposal methods
for prescription drugs could apply to over-the-counter drugs as well.
Why the Precautions?
Disposal instructions on the label are
part of FDA's "risk mitigation" strategy, says Capt. Jim Hunter,
R.Ph., M.P.H., senior program manager on FDA's Controlled Substance Staff. When
a drug contains instructions to flush it down the toilet, he says, it's because
FDA, working with the manufacturer, has determined this method to be the most
appropriate route of disposal that presents the least risk to safety.
Drugs such as powerful narcotic pain
relievers and other controlled substances carry instructions for flushing to
reduce the danger of unintentional use or overdose and illegal abuse.
For example, the fentanyl patch, an
adhesive patch that delivers a potent pain medicine through the skin, comes
with instructions to flush used or leftover patches. Too much fentanyl can
cause severe breathing problems and lead to death in babies, children, pets,
and even adults, especially those who have not been prescribed the drug.
"Even after a patch is used, a lot of the drug remains in the patch,"
says Hunter, "so you wouldn't want to throw something in the trash that
contains a powerful and potentially dangerous narcotic that could harm
others."
Environmental Concerns
Despite the safety reasons for flushing
drugs, some people are questioning the practice because of concerns about trace
levels of drug residues found in surface water, such as rivers and lakes, and
in some community drinking water supplies. However, the main way drug residues
enter water systems is by people taking medications and then naturally passing
them through their bodies, says Raanan Bloom, Ph.D., an environmental
assessment expert in FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. "Most
drugs are not completely absorbed or metabolized by the body, and enter the
environment after passing through waste water treatment plants."
A company that wants FDA to approve its
drug must submit an application package to the agency. FDA requires, as part of
the application package, an assessment of how the drug's use would affect the
environment. Some drug applications are excluded from the assessment
requirement, says Bloom, based on previous agency actions.
"For those drugs for which
environmental assessments have been required, there has been no indication of
environmental effects due to flushing," says Bloom. In addition, according
to the Environmental Protection Agency, scientists to date have found no
evidence of adverse human health effects from pharmaceutical residues in the
environment.
Another environmental concern lies with
inhalers used by people who have asthma or other breathing problems, such as
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Traditionally, many inhalers have
contained chlorofluorocarbons (CFC's), a propellant that damages the protective
ozone layer. The CFC inhalers are being phased out and replaced with more
environmentally friendly inhalers.
Depending on the type of product and
where you live, inhalers and aerosol products may be thrown into household
trash or recyclables, or may be considered hazardous waste and require special
handling. Read the handling instructions on the label, as some inhalers should
not be punctured or thrown into a fire or incinerator. To ensure safe disposal,
contact your local trash and recycling facility.
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