Community Corner

Dispose of Pharmaceuticals Safely During 'Take Back' on Wednesday

Barth's on East Main Street and Martin on Route 58 both accepting unused meds.

Bring a bit of spring cleaning to your medicine cabinet and safely dispose of pharmaceuticals all at the same time.

The Great Peconic Take Back II is a free initiative offered on Wednesday at 13 independent pharmacies on the East End for residents to properly get rid of unwanted, unused, and expired prescription and over-the-counter medications. 

In Riverhead, Barth's Drug Store on East Main Street and Martin Drugs, on Route 58, are participating.

Heather Meyer, a supervising pharmacist at the Barth's location in Mattituck, working in Riverhead this week, said that Wednesday's Take Back isn't the only day the public can drop off unused medications at Barth's. But this week in particular, she said publicizing the cause only seemed right.

"We take back medication throughout the year," she said. "But especially with Earth Day coming up on Friday, we figured it would be timely. When we held the take back event last year we filled up about three-quarters of one of these carts," she said, pointing to a 100-gallon tip cart.

Robert E. Grisnik of Southrifty Drug in Southampton organized the event for the Peconic Independent Pharmacy Association, which in its first installment yielded almost half a ton of medications. He said the benefits of the program are two fold.

“Taking drugs out of people’s homes helps a lot of things. It helps the environment and it helps families getting old, expired drugs off the shelves. Teenagers often experiment with the use of painkillers and tranquilizers. It’s the second most abused drug other than marijuana with teenagers,” he said.

Improper disposal of pharmaceuticals reaks havoc on the environment and poses a risk to the safety of humans and wildlife, particular fish. They can contaminate the ground water if flushed or once they reach a landfill, according to the Group for the East End, which supports and helps promote the pharmacies’ endeavor.

“For years people were told to flush it,” said Jeremy Samuelson, an environmental advocate with the Group said. “Proper disposal of prescription drugs keeps the potentially harmful compounds from building up in our drinking water supply,” Samuelson said, adding that home filters don’t eliminate prescription compounds.

“Sadly when we dispose of these things in the wrong way, they never truly leave our aquifer where all of our water comes from. This means every time we turn on the tap, we are re-exposed to these chemicals that should be tightly managed via prescriptions and expert medical advise,” he said.

Grisnik said he was moved to do his part as a pharmacist to make sure families could more easily dispose of leftover medication after a child in a close friend’s family became addicted to pain killers that was found in his parent’s medicine cabinet.

“It hits home when something like that happens,” he said. “I’m dispensing all these drugs and if people don’t take them like they should – sometimes people don’t take all the antibiotics like they should when they start to feel better – they should get rid of them properly.”

Last April, Grisnik held a “take back” day at his pharmacy, which he’s owned since 1972, in coordination with the National Community Pharmacy Association. He took in over 1,144 bottles of medicine, including one bottle from his pharmacy dating back to the year it opened and an over-the-counter medication that expired in 1952.

Other independent pharmacies have since asked to join in, and the group banded together to form the Peconic Independent Pharmacy Association. They held their first “take back” event in the fall. They took in about ten 100-gallon tip carts.
Emil Norsic and Sons of Southampton is donating the carts for Wednesday’s event.

The pharmaceuticals, ranging from Valium to expired dosages of NyQuil, are properly incinerated at an approved facility, Grisnik said.

The pharmacies work with their local police departments because in New York State they are not allowed to take back and dispose of controlled substances without police assistance, he said.

Medications should be dropped off in their original, labeled containers and the patient’s name should be crossed out with a permanent black marker and it doesn’t matter if they were purchased at the pharmacy they are being turned into.

Samuelson said that the Group is working with Suffolk County Legislator Jay Schneiderman, I-Montauk, to get money from a county grant so that East End police agencies can install a locked drop-box for unused or expired prescription drugs, such as the ones found in county police stations in western Suffolk.

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