You know the drug companies will balk at this and claim safety issues while trying to protect their profits. They may present the biggest hurdle since some states have been willing to try pilot programs.
Every year we flush at least $1 billion in prescription drugs down our toilets. We pour them into incinerators; we bury them in landfills. But Moshe Alamaro, an inventor and researcher at MIT with not-just-big-but-colossal ideas—such as building 200-foot ice mountains to fight water shortages—believes he has a solution for unused pharmaceuticals. “We recycle glass and plastic,” the silver-haired Alamaro said one recent afternoon, wearing owlish glasses and sitting among the stacks at the MIT library. “Why all the apprehension about doing the same for a bottle of pills?”
It’s not that simple, of course. You can’t just toss your pills in a bin with your soda cans and drag them to the curb. Alamaro’s plan entails nothing less than wholesale changes to how we think about packaging, distributing, and consuming prescription drugs. Pills would come in tamperproof packs and include a bar code or radio frequency ID to provide such details as dosage amounts and expiration date; a chemical agent would record the drug’s exposure to heat and light (which can make many medicines less effective). The packs would be loaded in a Pez-like dispenser, ensuring that unused pills would be untouched and safe for recycling. Patients could then return their medications to processing centers via a drop box or prepaid mailer. The centers would inspect the drugs, and pills in good condition would be available for redistribution.
Remember the idea to run Java on older 486 PC’s? You could keep the hardware in use in spite of upgrade frenzy. It didn’t catch on. Software is designed to make your hardware expire. They would rather throw the pills away. It’s a cultural thing. New is better and if you can’t afford it, well tough luck. The solution for old PC’s was to dump them or donate them to a poor country. This could happen with the pills. People in some poor country will be running cheap pill websites on our old Wintel 486 PC’s, selling cheap meds to Americans running Pentium 4 PC’s. Maybe they will make a fast buck. Americans love saving money on medication. They hate the idea of having a slow PC.
Wow. What a stunningly dumb idea. Let’s build a massive recycling infrastructure comple with RFID tags, mailers, little micro heat sensors, and a redistribution center and who knows what else, so Granny will have to send back those last 4 pills rather than flush them… and this saves money how? And saves it for who?
Drugs are costly not because so many are wasted. Drugs are costly because like most large corporate enterprises, the regulation and oversight required is lacking to non-existant. A desire to turn a healthy profit (which is good) has been replaced by a blinding greed, completely eclipsing any sense of morality or civic responsibility. The truth is that while R&D is expensive, in reality, the drugs just don’t cost that much.
Henry Ford said to make the highest quality product and lowest possible cost and pay the highest possible wages. Modern business says, “fuck that and you, I need another yatch.”
Packaging will have to change, and that will boost costs.
Everything will have to be distributed in tamperproof blister packs.
I suggest that blister packs be nitrogen filled and include an oxygen sensor so that you can tell if the pack has been violated by a syringe. And then, that won’t be enough. Some creep will find a way to dose your meds.
Isn’t it clear how creepy the whole thing is. So what if people have drugs they don’t need. I don’t want to advocate darwinian culling, but there’s only so much you can do for people who are destined to destroy themselves. It’s better to help cautious people to defend themselves against creeps. If we were all a little more security minded, we wouldn’t have a governent that thinks it needs to control all aspects of our lives.
This is like Bottle/can recycling…
Add a nickle to the price, and get it BACK when you return the bottle or can…
never happen… people are too lazy to do it
#7 – never happen… people are too lazy to do it
Comment by woktiny — 8/24/2006 @ 1:04 pm
And shouldn’t happen.
I don’t know if this guys ice castle idea holds water (yes, I read the article 🙂 ) or even if the guy really is brilliant. But if he is, then this idea proves that everyone has a bad day.