Other Headlines

Former Trade Desk pro from Siemens joins the DOTmed 100 company.
On-pump and off-pump bypass surgery yield similar results, reports the Harvard Heart Letter.
The Institute of Cancer Research has found that women with breast cancer had more manageable side effects when their radiotherapy was delivered in larger - but fewer - doses.
Research on traumatic brain injury will be used to determine faster treatment, safer vehicles.
The Canadian maker of high-end interventional MR suites acquires a prototype neurosurgery robot designed with aerospace technology in exchange for 1.6 million shares.

Have News for Us?

Submit your news on the industry, people, or companies.

Forward to a Friend

More Industry Headlines

New Research Study Will Use fMRIs to Examine Soldiers' TBIs Research on traumatic brain injury will be used to determine faster treatment, safer vehicles.

Congress Submits Bill to Repeal Antitrust Exemption Reform measure would end exemption for health care, medical malpractice insurance.

FDA Issues Guidance on Facilitating Medical Device Clinical Trials Agency suggests statistical methods for cost and streamlining.

White House to Convene Health Meeting President Obama promised a bipartisan event Feb. 25.

Las Vegas Spine Surgeon Pleads Guilty to Misprision of Felony A federal case review from the pages of DOTmed Business News.

Philips Inks Three-Year Deal With SunCrest Philips' telemedicine division inked a three-year deal with the Sun Belt home care system SunCrest Healthcare, Inc.

HHS Highlights Health Care Investments in New Budget Budget includes health IT, research, public health measures.

Colorado Physicians Group Settles With FTC Over Alleged Price-Fixing Group accused of anti-competitive tactics against health insurers.

FDA Wants $4 Billion to Overhaul Medical Device, Food Safety Monitoring The injections of new cash could help establish a registry for medical devices and create over 1,000 new jobs.

NIH Discusses Dose Monitoring Program DOTmed News spoke with Dr. David Bluemke of the National Institutes of Health about the new program to require radiation dose monitoring on all equipment purchased by the NIH's Clinical Center.

Take care to dispose
of medication correctly

FDA Has New Web Page for Select Medicine Disposal Instructions

by Astrid Fiano, DOTmed News Writer
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has recently created a web page, Disposal by Flushing of Certain Unused Medicines: What You Should Know, to assist consumers in disposing of certain medications, including some high-potency opioids and other selected controlled substances.

The FDA recommends some medicines be disposed of by flushing down the sink or toilet, in order to prevent children and others from accidentally ingesting the drugs. Some medicines are potentially harmful or deadly in a single dose if taken by someone other than the intended user.

The web site explains that a person may have already received disposal directions for medicines upon receiving a prescription. If a person's medicine is on the FDA list of medicines recommended for flushing, but he or she did not receive information on disposal with the prescription, directions on disposal of the medicines can be found at DailyMed -- http://dailymed.nlm.nih.gov/dailymed/about.cfm by searching for the drug name.

The FDA notes that disposal by flushing is not appropriate for most medicines.

For those medicines without disposal directions, safe disposal can be carried out by placing the medicine in the household trash and mixing the medicine with something to hide the medicine or make it unappealing, such as kitty litter or used coffee grounds, and then placing that mixture in a container such as a sealed plastic bag.

Another option may be to dispose of the medication through drug "take back" programs, if federal and state laws permit.

"The safe disposal of medicines from the home after they are no longer needed is an important concern for the FDA," said Douglas Throckmorton, M.D., deputy center director of FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research.

The medicines listed as recommended for disposal by flushing include Actiq, Avinza, Daytrana, Demerol, Diastat/Diastat AcuDial, Dilaudid, Dolophine Hydrochloride, Duragesic Embeda, Fentora, Kadian, Methadone Hydrochloride, Methadose, Morphine Sulfate, MS Contin, Onsolis, Opana, Opana ER, Oramorph SR, Oxycontin, Percocet, Percodan, and Xyrem.

"The FDA is working with other groups to improve the use of several drug disposal methods, including drug take back programs," Throckmorton further stated. "However, for some potent medicines that can cause harm or death if inadvertently taken by family members, the FDA currently recommends flushing them down the sink or toilet to immediately and permanently remove them from the home. Simple precautions like these can reduce the likelihood of accidental and potentially dangerous exposure to unused medicines."

The FDA has worked with the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) since 2007 to develop consumer guidance for proper disposal of prescription drugs. The 2009 version of the federal guidelines is available at:

http://www.whitehousedrugpolicy.gov/publications/pdf/prescrip_disposal.pdf.

Adapted in part from a FDA press release.
Link: http://www.fda.gov/NewsEvents/Newsroom/PressAnnouncements/ucm186598.htm

Interested in Medical Industry News? Subscribe to DOTmed's weekly news email and always be informed. Click here, it takes just 30 seconds.

Please Send us your Comments.

Printable Story
Access and use of this site is subject to the terms and conditions of our LEGAL NOTICE & PRIVACY NOTICE
Property of and Proprietary to DOTmed.com, Inc. Copyright ©2001-2010 DOTmed.com, Inc.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED