[Pharmwaste] Percentage of waste drugs from unwanted consumer meds

Tenace, Laurie Laurie.Tenace at dep.state.fl.us
Mon Nov 14 09:40:34 EST 2005


This sounds like a great project for a college student. In fact, it would be
great for students from various states - 

 

Laurie 

 

 

  _____  

From: pharmwaste-bounces at lists.dep.state.fl.us
[mailto:pharmwaste-bounces at lists.dep.state.fl.us] On Behalf Of Galvin, Dave
Sent: Friday, November 11, 2005 1:59 PM
To: 'Charlotte A. Smith'; pharmwaste at lists.dep.state.fl.us
Cc: Stevan Gressitt; Gilliam, Allen
Subject: RE: [Pharmwaste] Percentage of waste drugs from unwanted consumer
meds

 

Charlotte et al. --  This is one of the key unanswered questions of the
moment.  I am aware of only two published studies that try to assess what
people do with old/unused medications, both via surveys.  Neither directly
answers the question, but both at least give a glimmer of what avenue people
use for disposal, and the more recent study also attempts to proportion out
use vs. disposal avenues.

 

A ten-year-old study from Pittsburg (I have only seen references to it, have
not tracked down the original article), appears to be the only American data
published:  Kuspis, D.A., and E.P. Krenzelok.  1996.  "What happens to
expired medications?  A survey of community medication disposal."  Vet. Human
Toxicol.  38: 48-49.  The survey found that 54 percent of people dispose of
unused medications in the solid waste, 35 percent via the sink or toilet, and
only 1 percent by returning them to pharmacies (as summarized in the
following source).

 

In the December, 2005, issue of Environmental Health Perspectives (available
on-line earlier), a new British study gives us the most useful look at this
issue:  Bound, J.P., and N. Voulvoulis.  2005.  "Household disposal of
pharmaceuticals as a pathway for aquatic contamination in the United
Kingdom."  Environmental Health Perspectives 113 (12): 1705-1711  (accessible
at: http://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/members/2005/8315/8315.pdf ).  This survey of
residents in southeast England found that, on average, half do not finish
prescription medications and thus end up with waste medications to dispose.
While 80 percent of pain meds are typically used up, only 18 percent of
antibiotics are used as prescribed, leaving 82 percent as waste.  Roughly
half of beta-blockers and anti-depressants go unused.  Overall, British
residents dispose of 63 percent of used meds in the solid waste, 11 percent
in the toilet, and bring 22 percent back to pharmacies.  The authors present
a very useful conceptual model for quantifying the pathways of
pharmaceuticals from domestic use into the environment.  They conclude,
"...disposal of unused pharmaceuticals either by household waste or via the
sink or toilet may be a prominent route that requires greater attention."

 

If we could get some up-to-date surveys of this kind here in the states, they
would be very useful to enlighten us all and help fill in the blanks in the
Bound and Voulvoulis model.  Maybe together with the non-compliance rate
information that Dr. Gressitt has referred to, we could begin to get our arms
around a rough quantification of waste pharmaceuticals in this country.

 

I hope this helps.

 

-- Dave Galvin

   Local Hazardous Waste Management Program in King County

   Seattle, Washington

   206-263-3085

   Dave.Galvin at metrokc.gov 

 

  _____  

From: Charlotte A. Smith [mailto:csmith at pharmecology.com] 
Sent: Friday, November 11, 2005 6:01 AM
To: Gilliam, Allen; pharmwaste at lists.dep.state.fl.us
Cc: Stevan Gressitt
Subject: RE: [Pharmwaste] Percentage of waste drugs from unwanted consumer
meds

 

Thanks, Allen, and much success at your seminar. Will you be discussing drug
waste with folks? The more often the better!  

 

Steve, if you have any hard data, that would be very helpful. I have given
your name to the Washington staffers, so they may be contacting you. Hope you
don't mind! 

 

Charlotte A. Smith, R. Ph., M.S., HEM

President

PharmEcology Associates, LLC

200 S. Executive Drive, Suite 101

Brookfield, WI 53005

262-814-2635

Fax: 414-479-9941

csmith at pharmecology.com

www.pharmecology.com

H2E Champion for Change Award 2004

  _____  

From: Gilliam, Allen [mailto:GILLIAM at adeq.state.ar.us] 
Sent: Friday, November 11, 2005 7:38 AM
To: Charlotte A. Smith; pharmwaste at lists.dep.state.fl.us
Cc: Stevan Gressitt
Subject: RE: [Pharmwaste] Percentage of waste drugs from unwanted consumer
meds

 

Charlotte (we're gonna miss ya at our next H2E seminar in n.w. arkansas in
january!),

 

i hope Stevan (cc'd above) will respond with more detailed info he had
provided (back in july?) regarding "non-compliance rates" (% of meds not used
by residential recipients).   i believe he referred to another person and
report (by a pharmaceutical company?) that indicated 40 to 60 % of drugs
prescribed are "tossed".  the med's final resting place (landfill or toilet?)
i don't believe was mentioned because of lack of data.  i believe he even
estimated the monetary losses to states' healthcare programs to be about $1
million for a state the size of arkansas (~2.5 million population) because of
this waste.  considering today's economic woes and the rising costs of
healthcare, one would think state legislators' eyes would pop out of their
sockets if they had this type of info and try to mitigate.

 

Stevan?  think you can dig up that source again?

 

Thanx in advance,

 

allen gilliam

adeq state pretreatment coordinator

501.682.0725

 

	-----Original Message-----
	From: pharmwaste-bounces at lists.dep.state.fl.us
[mailto:pharmwaste-bounces at lists.dep.state.fl.us] On Behalf Of Charlotte A.
Smith
	Sent: Thursday, November 10, 2005 4:16 PM
	To: pharmwaste at lists.dep.state.fl.us
	Subject: [Pharmwaste] Percentage of waste drugs from unwanted
consumer meds

	Hello,

	 

	I just received a call from a staffer at the US House of
Representatives Science Committee inquiring as to what percentage of drugs
entering the environment, primarily through drain/sewer disposal, can be
attributed to consumers flushing unwanted medications. I do not know of any
studies on this or available data. Do any of you have information you can
share that I can refer back to this gentleman? It appears the House of
Representatives is starting to become interested in this issue so I think we
should do all we can to make the case for enabling legislation, especially
with respect to DEA and funding of programs. Thanks much! 

	 

	Charlotte A. Smith, R. Ph., M.S., HEM

	President

	PharmEcology Associates, LLC

	200 S. Executive Drive, Suite 101

	Brookfield, WI 53005

	262-814-2635

	Fax: 414-479-9941

	csmith at pharmecology.com

	www.pharmecology.com

	H2E Champion for Change Award 2004

	 

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