apartment therapy changing the world, one room at a time


Green Dilemma: Getting Rid of Expired Meds

4-15-2008medicine.jpg

We were thinking about our medicine cabinet last night. It's relatively clean, but we decided to rifle through and do a little purge, regardless. We don't have much prescription medicine, but we did find a few tubes and over the counter bottles of expired drugs (of the cold medicine variety).

So -- what to do with them?

 
 

Treat your drugs, prescription and otherwise like hazardous waste.

The best places to go when looking to responsibly dispose of expired medicine is your pharmacy. Many pharmacies have takeback programs. If your pharmacy doesn't, call around.

If you can't find a pharmacy that will correctly dispose of your medicine, then call your city's hazardous waste department. Hopefully, they can help.

In our neighborhood -- Berkeley, California -- Elephant Pharmacy will take back medicine for safe disposal.

If you know of a pharmacy that does the same in your neighborhood, please list it below -- for the benefit of your neighbors!


image via Merrick Brown; flickr.com

Tags

cleaning, hazardous waste disposal, medicine

Related Links

Share

Comments (8)

I recently did the same purge, and came up with 5 bottles of hydrogen pyroxide (?!) What to do with those?

posted by SFGail on 2008-04-15 14:29:10
view SFGail's profile

If you're in Palo Alto, Palo Alto Medical Foundation (the medical center on El Camino near University)'s pharmacy accepts unwanted/expired meds. Here's the February announcement:
http://www.pamf.org/news/2008/0201unwantedorexpired.html

Pharmacy hours are
Monday through Friday, 9-6:30
Saturday, 9-1
And the map:
http://www.pamf.org/maps/paloalto.html

posted by deluscious on 2008-04-15 15:31:16
view deluscious's profile

I hope that everyone else is able to properly dispose of their prescriptions meds. Unfortunately none of the pharmacies in my area offer a take back program. One told me to dispose of the meds in the plastic bottle to prevent contamination of the water supply but it's not like disposing of plastic bottles into a landfill is a great solution either!

posted by http://badhuman.wordpress.com on 2008-04-15 16:29:39
view http://badhuman.wordpress.com's profile

wow. i'm glad you addressed this! My medicine cabinet is fairly clean & lean, but that's because i did a purge about a year ago and (gulp) threw everything in the trash. Yikes.

posted by mh330 on 2008-04-15 16:52:47
view mh330's profile

re: hydrogen peroxide, assume you mean standard drugstore 1%-3% solution
leave the caps off the bottles. it will "decompose" to water (the extra oxygen having released into the air). you can gargle with it as is, so it shouldn't harm anything to just pour it out.

posted by pvett on 2008-04-16 00:05:53
view pvett's profile

Law enforcement recommend disposing of your meds by mixing them in with your pets litter or other droppings to avoid others finding your drugs and selling them illegally.

posted by angipants on 2008-04-17 15:04:40
view angipants's profile

hydrogen peroxide, if it has not decomposed as stated above, is an excellend cleaner for the bathroom. it zaps mildew/mold. best used with a brush type implement.

posted by avianmission on 2008-04-19 11:52:05
view avianmission's profile

In San Mateo County, California, a number of police departments will accept medications; they have special drop boxes.

posted by Jeri Dansky on 2008-04-26 02:45:11
view Jeri Dansky's profile