2014
DOI: 10.1186/2052-3211-7-6
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Medicines discarded in household garbage: analysis of a pharmaceutical waste sample in Vienna

Abstract: ObjectivesTo analyze a sample of pharmaceutical waste drawn from household garbage in Vienna, with the aim to learn whether and which medicines end up unused in normal household waste.MethodsWe obtained a pharmaceutical waste sample from the Vienna Municipal Waste Department. This was drawn by their staff in a representative search in October and November 2009. We did a manual investigation of the sample which contained packs and loose blisters, excluded medical devices and traced loose blisters back to medici… Show more

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Cited by 42 publications
(39 citation statements)
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“…The majority of the articles are from Asia and Africa, three from Europe and one from South America, indicating medical storage and related wastage of resources are problems in Asia and Africa. The paucity of published papers in Europe and Oceania should not be attached to the ignorance of the problem in that region; however, this might be because of their drug take-back policies in the form of social campaigns or routine back to pharmacy strategies [73,[75][76][77]. The present systematic review not only maps global evidence on the modality and causality of household medicine storage but also remarkably addresses possible solutions for dealing with the problem in different contexts.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The majority of the articles are from Asia and Africa, three from Europe and one from South America, indicating medical storage and related wastage of resources are problems in Asia and Africa. The paucity of published papers in Europe and Oceania should not be attached to the ignorance of the problem in that region; however, this might be because of their drug take-back policies in the form of social campaigns or routine back to pharmacy strategies [73,[75][76][77]. The present systematic review not only maps global evidence on the modality and causality of household medicine storage but also remarkably addresses possible solutions for dealing with the problem in different contexts.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, patients do not see a reason for continuing medication following a therapy change by the doctor or after the subjective perception of an improvement of their conditions. Nonadherence can stem from deliberate action of the patient related to individuals' beliefs (intentional non-adherence) and from factors outside the conscious control of the medicine user (unintentional non-adherence) (16). Patients often forget to take medication or may be unable to afford a full course.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…11,14,[16][17][18] Table 2 summarise the reasons for medication waste production and the commonest cause was expiration of medicines in most of the studies.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%