Turning waste medicines to cost savings: A pilot study on the feasibility of medication recycling as a solution to drug wastage

Author:

Toh Ming Ren1,Chew Lita12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacy, National University of Singapore, Singapore

2. Department of Pharmacy, National Cancer Centre of Singapore, Singapore

Abstract

Background: Unused medicines represent a major source of wastage in healthcare systems around the world. Previous studies have suggested the potential cost savings from recycling the waste medicines. However, issues of product safety and integrity often deter healthcare institutions from recycling donated medications. Aim: To evaluate the feasibility of medication recycling and to assess the actual cost savings from recycling waste medicines and whether reusability of waste medicines differed among various drug classes and donor sources. Design and setting: Donated medications from hospitals, private medical clinics and patients were collected and assessed using a medication recycling protocol in a hospice care setting from November 2013 through January 2014. Costs were calculated using a reference pricing list from a public hospital. Results: A total of 244 donations, amounting to 20,759 dosage units, were collected during the study period. Most donations (90.8%) were reusable, providing a total of S$5266 in cost savings. Less than 2 h daily was spent by a single pharmacy technician on the sorting and distributing processes. Medications donated by health facilities were thrice more likely to be reusable than those by patients (odds ratio = 3.614, 95% confidence interval = 3.127, 4.176). Medications belonging to Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical class G (0.0%), H (8.2%) and L (30.0%) were the least reusable. Conclusion: Most donated medications were reusable. The current protocol can be further streamlined to focus on the more reusable donor sources and drug classes and validated in other settings. Overall, we opine that it is feasible to practise medication recycling on a larger scale to reduce medication wastage.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,General Medicine

Reference17 articles.

1. World Health Organisation. Waste from health-care activities, http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs253/en (2011, accessed 1 January 2016).

2. Aitken M, Valkova S. Avoidable costs in US healthcare: the $200 billion opportunity from using medicines more responsibly. Report, IMS Institute for Healthcare Informatics, Danbury, CT, 1 June 2013.

3. Trueman P, Lowson K, Blighe A. Evaluation of the scale, causes and costs of waste medicine. Report, York Health Economics and University of London, London, November 2010.

4. Royal Pharmaceutical Society. Medicines optimisation: helping patients to make the most of medicines, https://www.rpharms.com/promoting-pharmacy-pdfs/helping-patients-make-the-most-of-their-medicines.pdf (2013, accessed 1 January 2016).

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