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ARTICLE |

Child-Resistant Containers and the Elderly

Gail S. Geiger, PharmD
JAMA. 1979;242(4):323. doi:10.1001/jama.1979.03300040011009.
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ABSTRACT

To the Editor.—  As a practicing pharmacist, I particularly enjoyed reading the COMMENTARY in THE JOURNAL, "Child-Resistant Containers for the Elderly."As primary dispensers of prescription medications, pharmacists were directly affected by the passage of the Poison Prevention Packaging Act of 1970 and 1972. I agree with the authors that pharmacists should offer their elderly patients the option to have a non-child-resistant container.Elderly patients have related many instances to me describing their dilemma in trying to open their prescription containers and the variety of instruments they have used in the process: pliers, hammer, screwdriver, hand-operated canopener, and feet—one patient claimed that stomping on his bottle worked at freeing its contents. Another patient stated that her 7-year-old granddaughter could open her bottle when she, herself, could not. The stories are numerous, much to the dismay of the elderly involved.As a solution to this problem in our hospital, the pharmacists

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