Product Stewardship Institute, Inc.
2 products found

Product Stewardship Institute, Inc. products

Pharmaceuticals

Pharmaceutical products are ubiquitous in our lives; millions of pharmaceuticals become wastes each year as products pass their expiration date, become unwanted, or patients die. Ongoing studies reveal that pharmaceuticals are escaping into the environment and that some classes can act as endocrine disruptors, which have been linked to abnormalities and impaired reproductive performance in some species. Pharmaceutical wastes present both wastewater and solid waste management issues. Currently, there is a lack of understanding as to whether there are convenient, consistent, legal, and safe ways to dispose of unwanted pharmaceuticals. This has led to environmental damage, as well as to unsafe storage practices that have resulted in accidental poisonings. Currently, residents are often instructed to flush unwanted pharmaceuticals down toilets, leading to potential contamination of surface waters, ground waters, and biosolids, and resulting in exposure to aquatic organisms. When residents dispose of pharmaceutical products in the garbage, these products present potential safety risks to the general public and to solid waste collection workers.

Medical Sharps

It is estimated that over 3 billion disposable needles and syringes and an additional 900 million lancets (collectively called “medical sharps”) enter the municipal solid waste (MSW) stream each year in the United States from two main sources: those managing their own health care at home by self-injecting medication (representing two-thirds of the needles used) and intravenous drug users. People living with diabetes generate a majority of these sharps, while the remainder is used by people treating themselves for a wide variety of other medical conditions as well as injection drug users. As self injection of medications becomes an increasingly popular mechanism for drug delivery, the number of home medical sharps is expected to increase significantly. Self-injectors routinely discard medical sharps in MSW generated in homes and in public settings, recycling bins (in plastic containers), and down toilets.