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Ready to do some house cleaning? Not in your closet
or cupboards, but in your medicine cabinet. How many
outdated medications lurk behind those mirrored doors?
If you wouldn't drink milk that was two months past its
expiration date, why would you consider taking medication
that was outdated? Over time, the chemical makeup and
potency of medications changes.
Taking outdated medications may also mean you are taking
a pill that is not going to help you says Mary Ross, UI
Hospitals and Clinics pharmacy assistant director. Many medications
become ineffective past their expiration date. Heat, cold,
and moisture can also affect a medication's potency. That's
why the bathroom medicine cabinet may not be the best place
to store your medications. And it's probably not the safest
place to keep medications away from children.
Even if your medicine cabinet is "high up," children are
inquisitive and avid climbers. "They can easily reach a
cabinet by climbing from the toilet (or other convenient
object) to the sink and thus reach the cabinet," Ross says.
Create a child-proof area that can be locked. Keep
medication lids tightly closed. A child-resistant cap is
meaningless if not properly fastened after each use.
Keep your medications in the container they come in
because the amber colored prescription bottles reduce the
amount of light that reaches the medicine. Avoid mixing
different pills in one container. They may chemically react
or you may mistakenly take the wrong pill. Keeping your
medication in the original container helps insure that you
are taking the medication you intend to take and in the
dosage recommended.
It also makes it easier to call your pharmacist for a
refill if one has been authorized. Don't call your
pharmacist if you need a new prescription or to renew your
current prescription, only your doctor can do that.
Prescription Safety
- Use only one pharmacy for all prescriptions.
- Tell your doctor and pharmacist about all
prescription and non-prescription medications as well as
the herbal or alternative medicines you take.
- Tell your doctor and pharmacist about any drug
allergies you have or problems or side effects you have
had with your medications.
- Never take medications prescribed for another.
- Don't stop taking your medication because you begin
to feel better. Complete the prescription.
- Throw away outdated medications.
- Never take medication in the dark. Turn on the light
and double-check what you are taking.
- Don't take more than the recommended dosage without
consulting your doctor.
- Consult with your doctor or pharmacist about the
possible reaction alcohol or other drugs may have on your
medication.
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