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1
An Evaluation of Unused Medicine Disposal Options On Wastewater Treatment Plant Influents
Douglas S. Finan – GlaxoSmithKlineMatthew D. Garamone - Pfizer Inc.
James Jahnke - Schering-Plough Corporation
Fourth Annual Unused Drug Return ConferenceOctober 31 – November 1, 2007
Portland, Maine
2
12.11.2005
Effluent alters sexuality of fishEffluent alters sexuality of fish
By Tony Davis
Some Background on PIE
n 1999, USGS National Reconnaissance of Emerging Contaminants sampled a network of 139 streams across 30 states for the
presence of pharmaceuticals nonprescription drugs were found with the greatest frequency,
followed by antibiotics, reproductive hormones, and other prescriptions drugs
concentrations were very low (i.e., part per trillion level)
C ente r fo r D rug E va lua tion and R e sea rchC ente r fo r D rug E va lua tion and R e sea rch
Lots of PressMany interested stakeholders
3
Some Background on PhRMA - The research based pharmaceutical industry is working to understand PIE
n PhRMA is committed to applying the same level of scientific rigor to PIE that we apply in other areas of our business
n We have developed working groups around PIE subjectsn Fate and Transportn Human Healthn Environmental Risk Assessmentn Hormonesn Unused Medicinesn Treatmentn Communications
4
Some Background on Unused Medicine Disposal
n In the past patients were told that drain disposal was the safest way to dispose of unused medicines.
n Publications on PIE identified unused medicine disposal as a driver for detection of pharmaceutical compounds in surface waters
n Several cities & towns have sponsored unused medicines take- back events
n Some states such as Maine and California have introduced legislation designed to encourage the development of pharmaceutical take-back programs
n In 2007 ONDCP/EPA/FDA issue Federal Guidelines on the Proper Disposal of Prescription Drugs
n In 2007 a bill was introduced in the US Congress directing EPA to study pharmaceutical take back programs
5
PRINCIPAL PATHWAYS FOR PHARMACEUTICALS INTO THE ENVIRONMENT
WWTP
Landfill
Incineration
What is the Impact of Unused Medicine Disposal on WWTPs?
6
Objectives
n Determine the impact on WWTP influent concentrations if active pharmaceutical ingredients (API) if:n all patient unused medicine was flushedn all patient unused medicine was placed in household trashn all patient unused medicine was taken back for incineration.
n Compare estimated API influent concentrations currently with those anticipated if take back programs were widely available and implemented.
n Identify next steps and additional data that are needed to answer the question: What is the best way to dispose of unused medicine?
7
OBJECTIVE 1
Determine the impact on WWTP influent concentrations if active pharmaceutical ingredients (API) if:
n all patient unused medicine was flushedn all patient unused medicine was placed in household trashn all patient unused medicine was taken back for incineration.
8
First, How Much Medicine Given to Patients Goes Unused?
n No definitive answer yet
n What do we know - from peer reviewed literature
n LTCF 6.7% unused based on financial data
n LTCF 13.1% unused based on financial data
n General public 2.3% unused based on financial data
n General Public 3% unused based on unit counts
n For our analysis, it was assumed that 10% of medicine purchased by the patient is unused.
9
Next, What Compounds Should be Studied
n What have been detected (USGS etc.)
n What data are available
n Other studies
n Identified twenty-four APIs representing a range of prescription drugs in terms of sales and physical-chemical properties
Acetaminophen Diltiazem Ibuprofen Ranitidine
Albuterol Sulfate Doxycycline Lincomycin Sulfamethoxazole
Cimetidine Enalaprilat Metformin Sulfathiazole
Ciprofloxacin Erythromycin-H2O Norfloxacin Tetracycline
Codeine Fluoxetine Oxytetracycline Trimethoprim
Digoxin Gemfibrozil Paroxetine metabolite Warfarin
10
n Estimating influent mass for each API from Patient Usen Annual Sales Data converted to Kgs of API (Tischler, L. In Press)n % of sales that goes unused (assumed 10%)n Loss by human metabolism (Tischler, L. In Press)n Influent Amount (Kg) = Sales*(0.90)*(1-Metabolism%)
n Estimating influent concentration for each APIn U.S. FDA method for estimating aquatic conc. (FDA, 1998) Uses
• Kg/yr of API
• Annual liters of wastewater entering WWTPs = 4.431x1013
(FDA, 1998)n Influent Conc. μg/l=
Estimating WWTP Influent Concentrations From Patient Use
API (kg/yr) 4.431x1013 (l/yr)
* 1x109 (μg/kg)
11
Estimated API Concentrations From Patient Use(also influent concentration if all unused medicine is taken back for incineration)
APIAPI
kg/year10% Unused API kg/year
API used by patients
Loss by Human
Metabolism (%)
Patient Use API to WWTP kg/year
POTW influent
μg/l
Acetaminophen 5,691,120 569,112 5,122,008 10% 4,609,807 104.03Albuterol Sulfate 3,569 357 3,212 72% 899 0.02Cimetidine 49,980 4,998 44,982 52% 21,591 0.49Ciprofloxacin 85,440 8,544 76,896 11% 68,437 1.54Codeine 15,095 1,510 13,586 10% 12,227 0.28Digoxin 229 23 206 16% 173 0.00Diltiazem 149,296 14,930 134,366 96% 5,375 0.12Doxycycline 32,784 3,278 29,506 0% 29,506 0.67Enalaprilat 772 77 695 10% 625 0.01Erythromycin-H2O 64,283 6,428 57,855 0% 57,855 1.31Fluoxetine 12,434 1,243 11,191 90% 1,119 0.03Gemfibrozil 231,530 23,153 208,377 24% 158,367 3.57Ibuprofen 1,035,229 103,523 931,706 78% 204,975 4.63Lincomycin 328 33 296 0% 296 0.01Metformin 1,597,887 159,789 1,438,098 0% 1,438,098 32.45Norfloxacin 2,700 270 2,430 7% 2,260 0.05Oxytetracycline 31 3 28 0% 28 0.00Paroxetine metabolite 19,474 1,947 17,527 0% 17,527 0.40Ranitidine 100,417 10,042 90,375 6% 84,952 1.92Sulfamethoxazole 314,389 31,439 282,950 88% 33,954 0.77Sulfathiazole 483 48 435 15% 369 0.01Tetracycline 68,569 6,857 61,712 0% 61,712 1.39Trimethoprim 64,450 6,445 58,005 15% 49,304 1.11Warfarin 3,999 400 3,599 92% 288 0.01
12
n Drain Disposal = Annual mass of API from patient use plus mass of the 10% of sales that goes unused and total flow to WWTPs.
n Take Back Programs = patient use concentrations since it is assumed that all take back would be incinerated.
n Household Trash – annual mass of API from patient use plus amount of medicines in landfill leachate for 10% unused (Tischler, L. In Press) and total flow to WWTPs.n Tischler’s Method
• Estimate concentration of API in landfill leachate• Estimate leachate volume (assume all leachate sent to WWTPs)• Estimate mass of API in leachate• Assumed all medicine unpackaged & immediately available for leaching• Fate in landfill incorporates three loss mechanisms
n Partitioning to solids (based on Kp)n Anaerobic degradationn Hydrolysis
Comparing Influent Concentrations of Disposal Methods
13
Estimated API Concentrations From Patient Use and 100% Sewer Disposal of Unused Medicine
API
Patient Use API
to WWTP kg/year
Flushed API Mass
(kg/yr) 10% of Sold
Total kg/year to
WWTP
POTW influent
μg/l
Acetaminophen 4,609,807 569,112 5,178,919 116.88Albuterol Sulfate 899 357 1,256 0.03Cimetidine 21,591 4,998 26,589 0.60Ciprofloxacin 68,437 8,544 76,981 1.74Codeine 12,227 1,510 13,737 0.31Digoxin 173 23 196 0.00Diltiazem 5,375 14,930 20,304 0.46Doxycycline 29,506 3,278 32,784 0.74Enalaprilat 625 77 702 0.02Erythromycin-H2O 57,855 6,428 64,283 1.45Fluoxetine 1,119 1,243 2,362 0.05Gemfibrozil 158,367 23,153 181,520 4.10Ibuprofen 204,975 103,523 308,498 6.96Lincomycin 296 33 328 0.01Metformin 1,438,098 159,789 1,597,887 36.06Norfloxacin 2,260 270 2,530 0.06Oxytetracycline 28 3 31 0.00Paroxetine metabolite 17,527 1,947 19,474 0.44Ranitidine 84,952 10,042 94,994 2.14Sulfamethoxazole 33,954 31,439 65,393 1.48Sulfathiazole 369 48 418 0.01Tetracycline 61,712 6,857 68,569 1.55Trimethoprim 49,304 6,445 55,749 1.26Warfarin 288 400 688 0.02
In this scenario, on average, 21% of influent load is due to unused medicine disposal to the sewer.
79% of influent load is due to patients taking medicines
14
Estimated API Concentrations From Patient Use and 100% Household Trash Landfill Disposal of Unused Medicine
API
Patient Use API
to WWTP kg/year
10% Unused API kg/year
Leachate API Mass (kg/yr) sorption efficiency 0.5
(Tischler, 2007)
Total kg/year to
WWTP
POTW influent
μg/l
Acetaminophen 4,609,807 569,112 64.0 4,609,871 104.03Albuterol Sulfate 899 357 1.6 901 0.02Cimetidine 21,591 4,998 0.3 21,592 0.49Ciprofloxacin 68,437 8,544 85.4 68,523 1.55Codeine 12,227 1,510 3.5 12,231 0.28Digoxin 173 23 0.0 173 0.00Diltiazem 5,375 14,930 0.2 5,375 0.12Doxycycline 29,506 3,278 37.1 29,543 0.67Enalaprilat 625 77 77.2 702 0.02Erythromycin-H2O 57,855 6,428 0.0 57,855 1.31Fluoxetine 1,119 1,243 0.0 1,119 0.03Gemfibrozil 158,367 23,153 83.4 158,450 3.58Ibuprofen 204,975 103,523 432.6 205,408 4.64Lincomycin 296 33 0.0 296 0.01Metformin 1,438,098 159,789 65.0 1,438,163 32.46Norfloxacin 2,260 270 270.0 2,530 0.06Oxytetracycline 28 3 0.0 28 0.00Paroxetine metabolite 17,527 1,947 0.0 17,527 0.40Ranitidine 84,952 10,042 3.3 84,956 1.92Sulfamethoxazole 33,954 31,439 0.7 33,955 0.77Sulfathiazole 369 48 0.0 370 0.01Tetracycline 61,712 6,857 3.6 61,716 1.39Trimethoprim 49,304 6,445 0.0 49,304 1.11Warfarin 288 400 0.0 288 0.01
On average, 0.9% Influent Load is due to unused medicine disposal to landfill.
99.1% of influent load is due to patients taking medicines
15
Comparison
n Sewer Disposal – Average = 0.9 μg/l
n Landfill Disposal – Average = 0.001 μg/l
n Take Back – No Change
Max = 12.8 μg/l
Min = 0.005 μg/l
Max = 0.01 μg/l
Min = <0.0000001 μg/l
n Influent Concentration Changes in μg/l From Unused Disposal
Max = 74%
Min = 10%
Max = 11%
Min = 0.0%
n Sewer Disposal – Average = 21%
n Landfill Disposal – Average = 0.9%
n Take Back – 0.0%
n % Influent Load From Unused
16
Comparison Chart
% Influent Load From Unused
APISewer
DisposalTrash
DisposalTake Back
Sewer Disposal
Trash Disposal
Take BackSewer
DisposalTrash
DisposalTake Back
Acetaminophen 116.88 104.03 104.03 10.99% 0.00% n/a 12.8436 0.0014 n/aAlbuterol Sulfate 0.03 0.02 0.02 28.41% 0.18% n/a 0.0081 0.0000 n/aCimetidine 0.60 0.49 0.49 18.80% 0.00% n/a 0.1128 0.0000 n/aCiprofloxacin 1.74 1.55 1.54 11.10% 0.12% n/a 0.1928 0.0019 n/aCodeine 0.31 0.28 0.28 10.99% 0.03% n/a 0.0341 0.0001 n/aDigoxin 0.00 0.00 0.00 11.68% 0.00% n/a 0.0005 0.0000 n/aDiltiazem 0.46 0.12 0.12 73.53% 0.00% n/a 0.3369 0.0000 n/aDoxycycline 0.74 0.67 0.67 10.00% 0.13% n/a 0.0740 0.0008 n/aEnalaprilat 0.02 0.02 0.01 10.99% 10.99% n/a 0.0017 0.0017 n/aErythromycin-H2O 1.45 1.31 1.31 10.00% 0.00% n/a 0.1451 0.0000 n/aFluoxetine 0.05 0.03 0.03 52.63% 0.00% n/a 0.0281 0.0000 n/aGemfibrozil 4.10 3.58 3.57 12.76% 0.05% n/a 0.5225 0.0019 n/aIbuprofen 6.96 4.64 4.63 33.56% 0.21% n/a 2.3363 0.0098 n/aLincomycin 0.01 0.01 0.01 10.00% 0.00% n/a 0.0007 0.0000 n/aMetformin 36.06 32.46 32.45 10.00% 0.00% n/a 3.6061 0.0015 n/aNorfloxacin 0.06 0.06 0.05 10.67% 10.67% n/a 0.0061 0.0061 n/aOxytetracycline 0.00 0.00 0.00 10.00% 0.01% n/a 0.0001 0.0000 n/aParoxetine metabolite 0.44 0.40 0.40 10.00% 0.00% n/a 0.0439 0.0000 n/aRanitidine 2.14 1.92 1.92 10.57% 0.00% n/a 0.2266 0.0001 n/aSulfamethoxazole 1.48 0.77 0.77 48.08% 0.00% n/a 0.7095 0.0000 n/aSulfathiazole 0.01 0.01 0.01 11.56% 0.00% n/a 0.0011 0.0000 n/aTetracycline 1.55 1.39 1.39 10.00% 0.01% n/a 0.1547 0.0001 n/aTrimethoprim 1.26 1.11 1.11 11.56% 0.00% n/a 0.1454 0.0000 n/aWarfarin 0.02 0.01 0.01 58.14% 0.00% n/a 0.0090 0.0000 n/a
Average 20.67% 0.93% n/a 0.897 0.001 n/a
WWTP Influent Concentrations μg/lInfluent Concentration Change
From Unused in μg/l
17
OBJECTIVE 2
Compare estimated API influent concentrations currently with those anticipated if take back programs were widely available and implemented.
18
What Do Patients Currently Do With Their Unused Medicine
n Household Trash = 45% to 55%
n Drain Disposal = 20% to 35%
n Take Back or Household Hazardous Waste = 1% to 8%
n Other:n Give it to other peoplen Store itn Always take it all
n We will use the upper bound
n 15% of household trash in the US is incinerated
19
Current State - Average 10% Influent Contribution From Unused
APIAPI
kg/yearUnused API
kg/year
8% HHW Incinerated API Mass
(kg/yr)
35% To Sewer API
Mass (kg/yr)
55% To Trash with 15% of Trash Incinerated
Leachate API Mass (kg/yr)
Patient Use API
to WWTP kg/year
Total kg/year to
WWTP
POTW influent
μg/l
% of Influent
Load From
Unused
Acetaminophen 5,691,120 569,112 0.0 199,189.2 29.9 4,609,807 4,809,026 108.53 4.14%Albuterol Sulfate 3,569 357 0.0 124.9 0.8 899 1,025 0.02 12.26%Cimetidine 49,980 4,998 0.0 1,749.3 0.1 21,591 23,341 0.53 7.50%Ciprofloxacin 85,440 8,544 0.0 2,990.4 39.9 68,437 71,468 1.61 4.24%Codeine 15,095 1,510 0.0 528.3 1.7 12,227 12,757 0.29 4.15%Digoxin 229 23 0.0 8.0 0.0 173 181 0.00 4.43%Diltiazem 149,296 14,930 0.0 5,225.4 0.1 5,375 10,600 0.24 49.30%Doxycycline 32,784 3,278 0.0 1,147.4 17.3 29,506 30,670 0.69 3.80%Enalaprilat 772 77 0.0 27.0 36.1 625 688 0.02 9.17%Erythromycin-H2O 64,283 6,428 0.0 2,249.9 0.0 57,855 60,105 1.36 3.74%Fluoxetine 12,434 1,243 0.0 435.2 0.0 1,119 1,554 0.04 28.00%Gemfibrozil 231,530 23,153 0.0 8,103.6 39.0 158,367 166,509 3.76 4.89%Ibuprofen 1,035,229 103,523 0.0 36,233.0 202.2 204,975 241,411 5.45 15.09%Lincomycin 328 33 0.0 11.5 0.0 296 307 0.01 3.74%Metformin 1,597,887 159,789 0.0 55,926.0 30.4 1,438,098 1,494,055 33.72 3.75%Norfloxacin 2,700 270 0.0 94.5 126.2 2,260 2,481 0.06 8.90%Oxytetracycline 31 3 0.0 1.1 0.0 28 29 0.00 3.75%Paroxetine metabolite 19,474 1,947 0.0 681.6 0.0 17,527 18,208 0.41 3.74%Ranitidine 100,417 10,042 0.0 3,514.6 1.5 84,952 88,469 2.00 3.97%Sulfamethoxazole 314,389 31,439 0.0 11,003.6 0.3 33,954 44,958 1.01 24.48%Sulfathiazole 483 48 0.0 16.9 0.0 369 386 0.01 4.38%Tetracycline 68,569 6,857 0.0 2,399.9 1.7 61,712 64,114 1.45 3.75%Trimethoprim 64,450 6,445 0.0 2,255.8 0.0 49,304 51,560 1.16 4.38%Warfarin 3,999 400 0.0 140.0 0.0 288 428 0.01 32.71%
20
What Kind of Participation Can We Expect In Take Back Programs
n US unused medicine take back pilots - 1%
n European unused medicine take back programs – 50%
n Canada – 20%
n Other US take back or mail back programsn Dry Cell Batteries – 3%n Car Batteries – 90%n Electronic Equip – 15%n Plastic Shopping Bags – 3%n Household Hazardous Waste – 3%n Curbside Recycling – 80%
n We use 20% participation for a US program and assume that the rest is disposed of in the trash
21
Future State with Mature Take Back - Average 0.7% Influent Contribution From Unused
APIAPI
kg/yearUnused API
kg/year
20% Take Back
Incinerated API Mass
(kg/yr)
80% To Trash with 15% of Trash Incinerated
Leachate API Mass (kg/yr)
Patient Use API
to WWTP kg/year
Total kg/year to
WWTP
POTW influent
μg/l
% of Influent
Load From
Unused
Acetaminophen 5,691,120 569,112 0.0 43.5 4,609,807 4,609,851 104.03 0.00%Albuterol Sulfate 3,569 357 0.0 1.1 899 900 0.02 0.12%Cimetidine 49,980 4,998 0.0 0.2 21,591 21,591 0.49 0.00%Ciprofloxacin 85,440 8,544 0.0 58.1 68,437 68,495 1.55 0.08%Codeine 15,095 1,510 0.0 2.4 12,227 12,230 0.28 0.02%Digoxin 229 23 0.0 0.0 173 173 0.00 0.00%Diltiazem 149,296 14,930 0.0 0.1 5,375 5,375 0.12 0.00%Doxycycline 32,784 3,278 0.0 25.2 29,506 29,531 0.67 0.09%Enalaprilat 772 77 0.0 52.5 625 678 0.02 7.74%Erythromycin-H2O 64,283 6,428 0.0 0.0 57,855 57,855 1.31 0.00%Fluoxetine 12,434 1,243 0.0 0.0 1,119 1,119 0.03 0.00%Gemfibrozil 231,530 23,153 0.0 56.7 158,367 158,423 3.58 0.04%Ibuprofen 1,035,229 103,523 0.0 294.2 204,975 205,270 4.63 0.14%Lincomycin 328 33 0.0 0.0 296 296 0.01 0.00%Metformin 1,597,887 159,789 0.0 44.2 1,438,098 1,438,142 32.46 0.00%Norfloxacin 2,700 270 0.0 183.6 2,260 2,444 0.06 7.51%Oxytetracycline 31 3 0.0 0.0 28 28 0.00 0.01%Paroxetine metabolite 19,474 1,947 0.0 0.0 17,527 17,527 0.40 0.00%Ranitidine 100,417 10,042 0.0 2.2 84,952 84,955 1.92 0.00%Sulfamethoxazole 314,389 31,439 0.0 0.5 33,954 33,954 0.77 0.00%Sulfathiazole 483 48 0.0 0.0 369 369 0.01 0.00%Tetracycline 68,569 6,857 0.0 2.4 61,712 61,715 1.39 0.00%Trimethoprim 64,450 6,445 0.0 0.0 49,304 49,304 1.11 0.00%Warfarin 3,999 400 0.0 0.0 288 288 0.01 0.00%
22
Comparison Of Present and Potential Future States
n Average Estimated Influent Difference Between Take Back and Household Trash Disposal is:
n Concentration - 0.2 parts per trillion
n Percent of Influent Load From Unused 0.15%
Average % of Influent Load From Unused
Average Influent Concentration Change From Current in μg/l
Current 10.34%Take Back 0.66% 0.8966%Household Trash 0.81% 0.8968%* 15% of household trash is incinerated
*
23
Comparison of Chart
% Influent Load From Unused
API CurrentTrash - 15% incinerated
20% Take Back
CurrentTrash - 15% incinerated
20% Take Back
Trash - 15% incinerated
20% Take Back
Acetaminophen 116.88 104.03 104.03 4.14% 0.00% 0.00% 12.8424 12.8426 0.0002Albuterol Sulfate 0.03 0.02 0.02 12.26% 0.15% 0.12% 0.0080 0.0080 0.0000Cimetidine 0.60 0.49 0.49 7.50% 0.00% 0.00% 0.1128 0.1128 0.0000Ciprofloxacin 1.74 1.55 1.55 4.24% 0.11% 0.08% 0.1912 0.1915 0.0003Codeine 0.31 0.28 0.28 4.15% 0.02% 0.02% 0.0340 0.0340 0.0000Digoxin 0.00 0.00 0.00 4.43% 0.00% 0.00% 0.0005 0.0005 0.0000Diltiazem 0.46 0.12 0.12 49.30% 0.00% 0.00% 0.3369 0.3369 0.0000Doxycycline 0.74 0.67 0.67 3.80% 0.11% 0.09% 0.0733 0.0734 0.0001Enalaprilat 0.02 0.02 0.02 9.17% 9.50% 7.74% 0.0003 0.0006 0.0003Erythromycin-H2O 1.45 1.31 1.31 3.74% 0.00% 0.00% 0.1451 0.1451 0.0000Fluoxetine 0.05 0.03 0.03 28.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.0281 0.0281 0.0000Gemfibrozil 4.10 3.58 3.58 4.89% 0.04% 0.04% 0.5209 0.5212 0.0003Ibuprofen 6.96 4.63 4.63 15.09% 0.18% 0.14% 2.3280 2.3296 0.0017Lincomycin 0.01 0.01 0.01 3.74% 0.00% 0.00% 0.0007 0.0007 0.0000Metformin 36.06 32.46 32.46 3.75% 0.00% 0.00% 3.6048 3.6051 0.0002Norfloxacin 0.06 0.06 0.06 8.90% 9.22% 7.51% 0.0009 0.0019 0.0010Oxytetracycline 0.00 0.00 0.00 3.75% 0.01% 0.01% 0.0001 0.0001 0.0000Paroxetine metabolite 0.44 0.40 0.40 3.74% 0.00% 0.00% 0.0439 0.0439 0.0000Ranitidine 2.14 1.92 1.92 3.97% 0.00% 0.00% 0.2266 0.2266 0.0000Sulfamethoxazole 1.48 0.77 0.77 24.48% 0.00% 0.00% 0.7095 0.7095 0.0000Sulfathiazole 0.01 0.01 0.01 4.38% 0.00% 0.00% 0.0011 0.0011 0.0000Tetracycline 1.55 1.39 1.39 3.75% 0.00% 0.00% 0.1547 0.1547 0.0000Trimethoprim 1.26 1.11 1.11 4.38% 0.00% 0.00% 0.1454 0.1454 0.0000Warfarin 0.02 0.01 0.01 32.71% 0.00% 0.00% 0.0090 0.0090 0.0000
Average 10.34% 0.81% 0.66% 0.89659 0.89677 0.0002
WWTP Influent Concentrations μg/lInfluent Concentration Change
From Current in μg/lTack Back /
Trash Difference
in μg/l
24
OBJECTIVE 3
Identify next steps and additional data that are needed to answer the question: What is the best way to dispose of unused medicine?
25
Some Data Gaps
n Amount of Unused Medicine
n Long Term Care Facilities may help answer this question
n Coroner's offices may also have some data
n Better data collection during pilots
n Confirmation of landfill leachate estimations
n Actual sampling of leachate
n Take Back Participation
n Work with pilots to understand participation rates
26
Evaluation of Other Environmental Drivers Needed
n Carbon Footprint and Climate Change
n Air Emissions
n Repackaging
n Groundwater Contamination
n Considering a Lifecycle Assessment of Take Back and Trash Disposal
27
We Need to Understand the Drug Abuse & Poisoning IssueWhere Does It Occur?
Landfill
Incineration
Take Back
Household Trash
Mail Back
Household Hazardous Waste
28
We Need to Understand Why Medicine Goes Unused
n From Patient Surveysn Adverse Effectsn Condition Resolvedn Excess suppliesn Medication expiredn Medication or dosage changedn Non-adherence - Perceived Ineffectiven Patient left (hospitalized, transferred, died)
n Over Prescribing
n Insurance Company Practices
29
SUMMARY & QUESTIONS
30
Summary
n Even with current disposal practices, drain disposal of unused medicines is very unlikely to contribute more than 10% of the APIs found in WWTP influents.
n Either household trash disposal or take back programs can reduce the unused medicine contribution of APIs in WWTP influent to < 1%
n Drain disposal of unused medicine should be discouragedn It is likely that there would be little effect (less than a 1 part per
trillion) on WWTP API influent concentrations as a result of implementing unused medicine take back programs compared to household trash disposal.
n More information is needed before the “best way to dispose of unused medicine” can be determinedn the other environmental impacts of landfill and incineration
disposal of unused medicinesn where in the unused medicine physical flow drug abuse and
poisoning occur
31
32
References
n What happens to expired medications? A survey of community medication disposal, Kuspis DA, Krenzelok EP, Veterinary and human toxicology, 2/1/1996, 38(1), 1
n Patient Practices and Beliefs Concerning Disposal of Medications, Seehusen DA, Edwards J, Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine, 11/1/2006, Vol. 19 No. 6, 2
n Medication destruction and waste measurement and management in long-term care facilities, Paone RP, Vogenberg FR, Caporello E, Rutkowski J, Parent R, Fachetti F, The Consultant Pharmacist, 1/1/1996, Vol. 11, 3
n The Disposition of Unused Medications in Nursing Facilities Study, Unpublished report prepared for the Ohio Department of Job & Family
n The Cost of Medication Waste, Bolvin M, Canada Pharm Journal, 5/1/1997, , 5
n The economic impact of Wasted Prescription Medication in an outpatient Population of Older Adults, Morgan TM, The Journal of Family Practice, 9/1/2001, Vol. 50 No. 9, 6
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