» Articles » PMID: 35496467

Barcoding Drug Information to Recycle Unwanted Household Pharmaceuticals: a Review

Overview
Specialty Chemistry
Date 2022 May 2
PMID 35496467
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Huge quantities of unwanted pharmaceuticals are left in households, notably as a consequence of the rising drug demand caused by improved healthcare and the aging population. Unwanted pharmaceuticals may thus easily end up polluting ecosystems upon disposal. This pharmaceutical waste issue has been aggravated during the coronavirus disease pandemic (COVID-19) by excess prescription and panic buying. Unwanted household pharmaceuticals are normally collected by owners and volunteers, then incinerated in centralized facilities, yet with low efficiency during the COVID-19 lockdowns. Most pharmaceuticals could be recycled because they are rather stable, however there is actually no sustainable strategy to manage unwanted pharmaceuticals in a pandemic. Here I review the management of unwanted pharmaceuticals in households during the pandemic, with emphasis on drug take-back programs, waste minimization and recycling efforts. Reducing pharamaceutical waste could be done by informing people on what to do with unwanted pharmaceutical products; using machine-readable codes for automatic sorting; and applying existing techniques for recovery of active pharmaceutical ingredients for reuse. I propose a new strategy where owners sort their unwanted pharmaceuticals and submit information online. This will generate coded mailing labels that allow the owner to separate pharmaceuticals into categories such as opened, unused, expired, and non-expired. Once collected by recycling facilities and manufacturers, active ingredients will be extracted to create new pharmaceuticals which will be recycled to other patients.

References
1.
Sun S, Li J, Han J . How human thermal plume influences near-human transport of respiratory droplets and airborne particles: a review. Environ Chem Lett. 2021; 19(3):1971-1982. PMC: 7817963. DOI: 10.1007/s10311-020-01178-4. View

2.
Wang X, Han J, Lichtfouse E . Unprotected mothers and infants breastfeeding in public amenities during the COVID-19 pandemic. Environ Chem Lett. 2020; 18(5):1447-1450. PMC: 7372974. DOI: 10.1007/s10311-020-01054-1. View

3.
Han J, He S . Need for assessing the inhalation of micro(nano)plastic debris shed from masks, respirators, and home-made face coverings during the COVID-19 pandemic. Environ Pollut. 2020; 268(Pt B):115728. PMC: 7537728. DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2020.115728. View

4.
Mechelke J, Rust D, Jaeger A, Hollender J . Enantiomeric Fractionation during Biotransformation of Chiral Pharmaceuticals in Recirculating Water-Sediment Test Flumes. Environ Sci Technol. 2020; 54(12):7291-7301. DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.0c00767. View

5.
Insani W, Qonita N, Jannah S, Nuraliyah N, Supadmi W, Gatera V . Improper disposal practice of unused and expired pharmaceutical products in Indonesian households. Heliyon. 2020; 6(7):e04551. PMC: 7393449. DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2020.e04551. View