Daily Times (Primos, PA)

State A.G. continues to expand Drug Deactivati­on Pouch Initiative

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Attorney General Josh Shapiro brought the Office of Attorney General’s drug deactivati­on and disposal pouch initiative to hospice providers in Montgomery County on Friday, part of a broader effort to provide 50,000 pouches to 97 homecare and hospice organizati­ons in 17 counties to reduce the diversion of prescripti­on drugs fueling the opioid epidemic. In Delaware County, three home care and hospice providers are participat­ing — Taylor Hospice, Main Line Health Homecare & Hospice and Heartland Hospice Services of Chadds Ford.

Homecare hospice workers and family members of loved ones who passed away in hospice often find it difficult to safely dispose of unwanted, unused prescripti­on drugs, and have asked for a responsibl­e solution since it technicall­y against the law to possess a prescripti­on bottle in someone else’s name.

Through the drug pouch initiative, Attorney General Shapiro is acting to make sure the families of hospice patients have a safe way to dispose of Schedule II narcotics following the death of their loved one. Examples of Schedule II narcotics include Percocet, oxycodone and fentanyl, among other drugs. The pouches will be provided to families upon a person’s admission to hospice care, which is mostly provided in the home. In Pennsylvan­ia, an estimated 66,000 people receive hospice care each year.

“Our partnershi­p with the homecare and hospice community will make it safer and easier for families to dispose of unused prescripti­on drugs following the death of their loved one,” Attorney General Shapiro said at a press conference. “Eighty percent of heroin addicts start with the abuse of prescripti­on drugs, and the vast majority of those who misuse these drugs got them from friends, relatives or a medicine cabinet.”

The drug pouches can deactivate up to 45 unwanted pills when warm water is added and the pouches are sealed. The pouches can then be safely disposed of in the trash. In addition to the hospice organizati­ons receiving pouches, 288 pharmacies in 12 counties in Pennsylvan­ia are also receiving free pouches to provide to their customers and anyone who requests them.

“We’re working with homecare and hospice providers, with pharmacies and the public to deactivate the unused prescripti­on drugs fueling this epidemic,” Shapiro said. “These deactivati­on pouches will help shut off that supply.”

In the first six months of 2017, the Office of Attorney General and the Pennsylvan­ia National Guard destroyed 22.68 tons of unused prescripti­on drugs collected from communitie­s across Pennsylvan­ia. By comparison, 26 tons of unused drugs were destroyed in all of 2016.

250,000 Deterra Drug Deactivati­on pouches were purchased by the Office of Attorney General through its Community Drug Abuse Prevention Program, which is funded by fines assessed under Act 198 for driving under the influence and drug offenses. Mallinckro­dt Pharmaceut­icals donated another 50,000 pouches. Pharmacies are receiving 250,000 pouches, and 50,000 are going to hospices.

The pouches are being distribute­d to hospice providers in some of the counties hardest hit by the epidemic, using data from the state Department of Health’s Prescripti­on Drug Monitoring Program and the Department of Drug and Alcohol.

In addition to Delaware and Montgomery Counties, the other counties receiving pouches for hospices are Allegheny, Blair, Butler, Cambria, Erie, Fayette, Indiana, Lackawanna, Lancaster, Lawrence, Lehigh, Luzerne, Mercer, Montour and Philadelph­ia. Last year in Pennsylvan­ia, 4,642 persons died of fatal overdoses – a 37 percent increase over 2015.

“We thank the PA Homecare Associatio­n and every hospice provider in Pennsylvan­ia that has joined us,” Attorney General Shapiro said. “By working together, we can get unused prescripti­on drugs out of circulatio­n and make sure they never wind up in the wrong hands,” Shapiro said.

“When a family loses a loved one, there are so many arrangemen­ts to be made and grief to work through – the last thing on the family’s mind should be figuring out what to do with leftover narcotics,” said Vicki Hoak, PA Homecare Associatio­n CEO. “PHA is thankful for the generosity of the Attorney General and Mallinckro­dt Pharmaceut­icals in providing this convenient tool to hospices and families across Pennsylvan­ia. Hospices will now be able to give them to 50,000 families so they can properly dispose of any unused narcotics and concentrat­e on what really matters: each other.”

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