I honestly don't think legally anyone will take the drugs. It's unfortanate but you have to think about liability
I would take them back to the pharmacist as they dispose of them properly. What ever you do, don't flush them... drugs will end up back in the water table.
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May 14th, 2009 05:51 PM #1
Donate unused medicine
Is there a place to donate unused medicine?
I have about 13 unopened boxes of Cyclosporine that will expire in the next several months... that's some $1500 worth!!! My treatment cycle has stopped before I used up all of it. There has to be a better place to than landfill to put these in...
I'll trade the boxes for a Macbook?
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May 14th, 2009 06:04 PM #2
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May 14th, 2009 08:21 PM #3
You would think there would be soe kind of program. Lots of lower income people are not insured and can not afford the drugs they need.
Like other poster said I would ask the pharmacy if they know of a program. Any such program would obviously have to be administered by some pharmacy.
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May 14th, 2009 09:40 PM #4Deal Fanatic




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Way way too much risk involved with this type of endeavour...not to mention that selling (even for free) such a product would be illegal as you don't have license to sell.
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May 14th, 2009 10:01 PM #5
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May 14th, 2009 10:22 PM #6
Might not be a bad medication to have sitting around if one of these big flu seasons hits, with strains that need immunosuppressive treatment. Like what happened a hundred years or so ago, with a strain that primarily (and paradoxically) killed people with strong, not weak immune systems.
I know that if there's a bad outbreak coming, this drug (or something similar to it) will be in my survival kit, in addition to the usual stuff._______________
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May 14th, 2009 10:33 PM #7Deal Fanatic




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It is not allowed...risk or not. The reality is that there is no certainty that the storage has been proper, that they have not been tampered with...is the risk low? Maybe...will the pharmacy risk their business on it? Insurance would go through the roof...
Anyway, there are far more pharmaceuticals returned/destroyed due to closeness of expiry...why not give those ones away? Same with consumer care products (i.e vitamin). Back at the office we could buy returned vitamins (expiry within 6 months) for pennies.
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May 14th, 2009 10:34 PM #8
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May 15th, 2009 12:10 AM #9
The 'cost' of most medication is not the physical chemical or substance itself, but all of the research that goes into the development of the product, licensing, lawsuits, etc., etc.
Some medication manufacturers provide pharmacies rebates or credit against returns of expired medications. But pharmacies are not allowed to accept returns of dispensed drugs._______________
"I worked with several H1B employees that were/are borderline ********. One of them wanted to spray an electrical patch panel with solvent to see if it would make the “network go faster”". <--- lol (source)
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May 16th, 2009 11:38 AM #10
You are half right. In Ontario many pharmacies accept unused and expired medicine. It cannot be re-dispensed even for free as who is to guarantee that it hasn't been tampered with. It is disposed of. Ask your pharmacist. Unfortunately it's not like the reusing eye wear programs.
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May 16th, 2009 01:26 PM #11
Yes you can recycle unused prescription medicines. There are many places in the US that do this and is starting to become more common in Canada, although it's still technically illegal to dispense. In addition to the Ottawa clinic I remember there being a group in NS that also inspects and recycles meds.
Dr. Jeff Turnbull, chief of staff at the Ottawa Hospital in Ottawa, already has begun recycling unused prescription drugs .... http://www.fftimes.com/node/220397
http://www.cbc.ca/health/story/2009/...ion-drugs.html
www.njt-pqt.org - site has links where you can donate unused prescriptionsLast edited by almostfreeman; May 16th, 2009 at 01:31 PM.
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May 28th, 2009 09:55 PM #12
There is legal implication with even giving someone medication. Prescription or not. Even if someone ask you for a Tylenol and you gave it to them, if anything happen to them because of the Tylenol, you are liable for it and they could sue you. That's why you would never get anything that you could ingested from a First Aid Office.Last edited by molala; May 28th, 2009 at 11:01 PM.
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Jun 9th, 2009 10:57 AM #13
That reminds me of a story I heard a few years ago.
Around Beaverton Ontario, (on the shores of Lake Simcoe about 45 min north of Toronto), the Ministry or Township were performing their regular lake water testing and discovered some very strange things in the water that just shouldn't have been there.
They tracked it down to a pharmacy in town that was simply flushing expired drugs down the toilet instead of disposing of them properly.
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Jun 11th, 2009 12:43 PM #14
The linked article pretty well answers the question of the thread. The releveant quote is:
"...according to the Ontario College of Pharmacists, the Drug and Pharmacies Regulation Act prohibits the redispensing of drugs that have been returned to a pharmacy once the dispensed drug has left the pharmacy.
In a statement, the college said: 'This protects the public from potential harm in receiving a drug that may have been tampered with or altered in some way, and is based on the premise that all patients no matter what their financial status or abilities deserve drugs that are of high quality; this cannot be assured where returned drugs are recycled or re-dispensed to patients.'
I do agree with someone who posted earlier that the "tampering" reason is inconsistent with allowing donation of food in Canada. However, I understand the College of Pharmacists' position from a legal liability perspective, whereas a food bank would not likely be sued if any donated food was tampered with.
Your best bet may be to donate to the US or 3rd world nation. Maybe check out the Red Cross website.
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Jun 11th, 2009 01:43 PM #15
I tried to return some expired medication to SDM yesterday. They refused to take it because it did not originate from their store.
That doesn't go a long way in encouraging people to take their unused medication in for proper disposal.
I was told to take it to the hospital.
For the record...
Take your unused or expired medication to your local pharmacy or call your local health unit, either will dispose of them safely for you. If you are interested in donating your family's unused medications to those in need of medical supplies contact the Canadian Medicine Aid Program. More information on CANMAP is available through their Toronto office at 416-778-7865.
http://www.ene.gov.on.ca/en/myenviro...e/medicine.phpLast edited by TCWeasel; Jun 11th, 2009 at 02:10 PM. Reason: Update
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