Community | June 29, 2009 | 6 comments

Programs for disposing unused medication lag behind 'don't flush' advice

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julesrs007
At the Leesburg Pharmacy, located in a Loudoun County strip mall, a big, round fish tank sits atop the prescription counter. There are no fish inside, not even any water: The tank is a repository for unused medications. People can drop off the Vicodin that didn't get used once the pain of a root canal subsided. Or the heart pills remaining after a grandmother's death. Or an asthma inhaler that had passed its expiration date. Or an antidepressant that turned out to have unpleasant side effects.

Once a week, the tank is emptied; the drugs are packed in cartons by pharmacy personnel and ultimately incinerated by a commercial waste firm.

"Our customers are thrilled because they had no idea what else to do with this stuff," said Cheri Garvin, chief executive of the employee-owned pharmacy.

These are customers who are trying to do the responsible thing. Over the years, Americans have been alerted to the dangers of a lot of problematic waste materials -- paint thinner, batteries, air conditioners. But leftover pills can seem so small, so easily disposable, that many people routinely flush them down toilets, wash them down sinks or throw them in trash that goes to a landfill.

And then they often end up in places where they shouldn't be, like the public water supply.

The average American takes more than 12 prescription drugs annually, with more than 3.8 billion prescriptions purchased each year, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. The most commonly cited estimates from Environmental Protection Agency researchers say that about 19 million tons of active pharmaceutical ingredients are dumped into the nation's waste stream every year.

The EPA has identified small quantities of more than 100 pharmaceuticals and personal-care products in samples of the nation's drinking water. Among the drugs detected are antibiotics, steroids, hormones and antidepressants. Last year, the Associated Press reported that trace amounts of drugs had been found in the water supplies of 24 major metropolitan areas; water piped to more than a milllion people in the Washington area had tested positive for six pharmaceuticals.

The EPA does not require testing for drugs in drinking water and has not set safety limits on allowable levels. While the minute quantities now being detected appear not to pose an immediate health risk, according to federal authorities, "there is still uncertainty about their potential effects on public health and aquatic life" over the long term, the EPA's water chief, Benjamin Grumbles, told a Senate committee last year. But the impact of long-term exposure of drugs on humans as well as on other species is less clear. Hormone-disrupting pharmaceuticals, for example, are one possible cause of a high incidence of "intersex" fish in the Potomac River basin: male smallmouth bass producing eggs, females exhibiting male characteristics.

Until recently, federal guidelines recommended that surpluses of highly toxic medications be flushed down the toilet; the same advice applied to drugs with a high potential for abuse or "diversion" -- the industry's word for what happens, for example, when kids help themselves to the OxyContin or Percocet in their parents' medicine cabinet. For other drugs, consumers have been directed to adulterate the medication by mixing it with an unpalatable substance -- such as cat litter or coffee grounds -- and put it out with the household trash.

But this spring, concerns about pharmaceuticals in the water supply led the Office of National Drug Control Policy to amend its advisory, telling consumers to avoid flushing unless the label or patient information specifies that method of disposal. The new guidelines still describe the cat-litter method of putting drugs in the trash, but they also encourage consumers to make use of community drug take-back programs.

Article Continued at: http://climate.weather.com/articles/wpolddrugs_newtricks.html?page=2
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6 comments // Programs for disposing unused medication lag behind 'don't flush' advice

  • neocongo
    • 0
      neocongo  
    • This type of article, every time, fails to mention anything about the pharmaceuticals that enter the water system via leaving your body naturally. Like many types of pollution, the blame is placed on the consumer, for "improper disposal" rather than the producer for not acknowledging or taking responsibility for the fact that this shit is going to find it's way into our waterways whether you eat the pills or flush them.

      It is much like incredibly excessive packaging of goods. The consumer is responsible for choking landfills, not the producer.

    • 2 years ago
  • N_Dank
  • futuregen
    • 0
      futuregen  
    • Green Day
      Restless Heart Syndrome

      FULL LYRICS:

      I've got a really bad disease
      It's got me begging
      On my hands and knees
      Take me to the emergency
      'cause something seems to be missing
      Somebody take the pain away
      It's like an ulcer bleeding in my brain
      Send me to the pharmacy
      So i can lose my memory
      I'm elated
      Medicated
      Lord knows i tried to find a way to run away

      I think they found another cure
      For broken hearts and feeling insecure
      You'd be surprised what i endure
      What make you feel self-assure?

      I never find a place to hide
      You never know what could be
      Waiting outside
      The accidents you could find
      It's like some kind of suicide

      So what ails you is what impales you
      I feel like i've been crucified to be satisfied

      I'm a victim of my symptom
      I am my own worst enemy
      You're a victim of your symptom
      You are your own worst enemy
      Know your enemy

      I'm elated
      Medicated
      I am my own worst enemy
      So what ails you is what impales you
      You are your own worst enemy
      You're a victim of the system
      You are your own worst enemy
      You're a victim of the system
      You are your own worst enemy

    • 2 years ago
  • futuregen
    • 0
      futuregen  
    • New song by Green Day. This guy has the drums down.

      Relevant to post:

      Send me to the pharmacy
      So I can lose my memory
      I'm elated
      Medicated
      Lord knows i tried to find a way to run away...
      So what ails you is what impales you
      I feel like i've been crucified to be satisfied...

      I'm a victim of my symptom
      I am my own worst enemy...
      You're a victim of your symptom
      You are your own worst enemy
      Know your enemy.

      Green Day
      Restless Heart Syndrome

      Songwriters: Armstrong, Billie Joe; Dirnt, Mike; Wright, Frank E Iii

    • 2 years ago
  • ii386
  • grungem0nkey
    • 0
      grungem0nkey  
    • The EPA is really messing this up. There needs to be limits set for the amount of pharmaceuticals allowed in drinking water or public water supplies.

    • 2 years ago
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