Federal Pharmacy Law and Regulation: Reading 4 Flashcards
____________________ Act of 1970 was in response to the growing issues of child poisonings caused by common household substances.
Poison Prevention Packaging Act (PPPA) of 1970
The Poison Preventing packaging Act of 1970 gave the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) the authority to require _____________ ____________ of hazardous substances.
special packaging
The goal is to prevent accidental poisoning in children under the age of 5, which means FOUR and under.
The Poison Prevention Packaging Act of 1970 is only meant to prevent poisonings in children younger than
five; which means four and under.
_____________ ____________ is “packaging that is designed or constructed to be significantly difficult for children under 5 years of age to open or obtain a toxic or harmful amount of the substance contained therein within a reasonable time and not difficult for normal adults to use properly, but does not mean packaging which all such children cannot open or obtain a toxic or harmful amount within a reasonable time.”
Special packaging
more commonly known as child-resistant packaging or child-resistant containers (CRCs)
T or F:
special packaging IS childproof.
FALSE;
it is commonly known as child-resistant packaging or child-resistant containers - all 3 terms used interchangeably; but NOT 100% childproof!
Requirements that a package must meet to be considered child-resistant and qualify as special packaging:
1)
2)
3)
1) At least 90% of adults should be able to open the container without significant difficulty.
2) At least 85% of children under 5 who have never seen the kind of packaging undergoing testing and have not been given any instruction on opening the packaging, should not be able to open the container in 5 minutes.
3) At least 80% of children under 5 still cannot successfully open the package after an adult shows them how to open the container in five minutes.
Which products require child-resistant packaging?
both controlled substances (controlled drugs) in a dosage form intended for oral administration and prescription drugs in a dosage form intended for oral administration require special packaging
Which drugs MUST be dispensed in special. packaging?
NONE
T or F?
drugs not in a dosage form intended for oral administration do NOT have to be in child-resistant packaging (nasal sprays, eye drops, and ointments as well as other non-ral dosage forms dont need to be disepnsed in special packaging)
True
T or F?
Patients AND prescribers can provider a waiver for non-child-resistant packaging.
True
___________ is an intentional and voluntary relinquishment of a right.
waiver
T or F?
Prescribers can grant a waiver ONLY on a prescription-by-prescription basis, and that stays in place for all refills of that prescription.
True
**prescribers cannot issue a blanket waiver that applies to all rxs for a single patient or all rxs they write.
Who CAN request a blanket waiver for all prescriptions to not be placed in special packaging?
patients and patient representatives
**does not legally need to be made in writing nor do these individuals need to sign anything to get non-child-resistant containers; however, it is a good idea to have documentation that the request was made and when.
List of prescription drug exemptions from special packaging requirements (12)
- sublingual dosage forms of nitroglycerin;
- sublingual and chewable forms of isosorbide dinitrate,10mg or less;
- erythromycin ethylsuccinate granules for oral suspension and oral suspensions containing
8g or less of erythromycin, or tablets in packages containing no more than the equivalent
of 16 grams erythromycin; - cyclically administered oral contraceptives in manufacturers’ mnemonic (memory-aid)
dispenser packages that rely solely upon the activity of one or more progestin or estrogen
substances; - anhydrous cholestyramine in powder form;
- all unit dose forms of potassium, 50mEq or less;
- betamethasone tablets packaged in manufacturers’ dispenser packages, containing 12.6mg
or less; - prednisone tablets, when dispensed in packages containing no more than 105mg total;
- medroxyprogesterone acetate tablets;
- methylprednisolone tablets in packages containing not more than 84mg total;
- colestipol powder in packages containing no more than 5g total;
- mebendazole tablets in packages containing no more than 600mg total.
Who can decide or request that a medication NOT be placed in child-resistant containers?
patient, patient representative, prescriber, and the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC)
– a pharmacist cannot.