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For Immediate Release: Thursday, April 20, 2017

On Saturday, April 29 between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m., residents can drop off unused, unwanted or expired prescription drugs as Montgomery County once again participates in the Washington Division of the Drug Enforcement Administration’s (DEA’s) National Prescription Drug Take-Back Day. 


County law enforcement agencies and the Montgomery County Department of Health and Human Services Substance Abuse Prevention Office are co-sponsoring the effort. This is a safe, free and anonymous opportunity to dispose of unused, unwanted or expired prescription drugs and is part of a national effort to prevent the increasing problems of prescription drug abuse and theft that continues to occur nationwide.

 

Fifteen drop-off locations will be open to the general public throughout MontgomeryCounty. These locations will accept prescription drugs and over-the-counter medications only. Liquids, illicit drugs, needles, sharps and syringes cannot be accepted as part of this take-back program. Police Officers will staff collection boxes in the parking lots of the following facilities or in the facility lobbies:

 

  • Chevy Chase::

     MCP 2nd District Police at Village of Friendship Heights Community Center, 4433 S. Park Avenue

 

     Chevy Chase Village Police Station, 5906 Connecticut Avenue

 

  • Gaithersburg:

     MCP 1st District Station/ Public Safety Headquarters, 100 Edison Park Drive

 

     MCP 6th District Station, 45 West Watkins Mill Road

 

     Gaithersburg Police Station, 14 Fulks Corner Avenue

 

     Asbury Methodist Village – Lobby of Hefner Bldg., 417 Russell Avenue

 

  • Germantown:

    MCP 5th District Station, 20000 Aircraft Drive

 

    Churchill Senior Living, 21000 Father Hurley Blvd.

 

  • Rockville:

    Rockville City Police/Montgomery County Sheriffs, Rockville City Police Station, 2 W. Montgomery Avenue (Lobby of

    Rockville City Police building)

 

    Maryland State Police Rockville Barrack, 7915 Montrose Road

 

    Bender Jewish Community Center (JCC) of Greater Washington, 6125 Montrose Road


  • Silver Spring:

    MCP 3rd District Station, 1002 Milestone Drive

 

    Schweinhaut Senior Center, 1000 Forest Glen Road

 

  • Takoma Park:

    Takoma Park Police at Takoma Park City Building Lobby, 7500 Maple Avenue


  • Wheaton:

     MCP 4th District Station, 2300 Randolph Road                                                             

 

Residents are encouraged to bring in medications containing controlled substances but will accept any medications brought for disposal. All sites will take pills and medication patches of all kinds. If possible, prescription labels should be removed or personal information should be blacked out; however, pill bottles will still be accepted if the labels are attached. No questions will be asked. This is an opportunity to safely empty out a medicine cabinet of drugs that are no longer needed.

Disposing of prescription drugs through a drug take-back day is the safest option. If it is safe to dispose of a drug by flushing it down a toilet, the drug label or prescription information will indicate that option is an appropriate means of disposal. Otherwise unused drugs should not be poured down a sink or flushed for disposal.

 

Drugs should not be thrown in the trash unless specific safety precautions for safe disposal are followed. The County’s Division of Solid Waste Services offers these suggestions:

 

  1. Place unwanted or expired medication into a plastic bag (with a seal) or other empty container with a lid to prevent liquid medications from leaking out.
  2. Mix with kitty litter, coffee grounds or sawdust. (Liquid medications can be solidified using kitty litter or sawdust.)
  3. Seal the bag and/or container.
  4. Crush pills or tablets.
  5. Put the container and/or bag containing the medication into your regular household trash.
  6. Remove the label with the patient’s name from the original medicine vial or bottle.
  7. Place the empty plastic vial or bottle into your blue County recycling bin. Empty aerosol inhalers can also be recycled in recycling bins.

 

Unused and/or expired medicines that remain in home cabinets are highly susceptible to diversion, misuse and abuse. According to the DEA, rates of prescription drug abuse in the U.S. are alarmingly high, as are the number of accidental poisonings and overdoses.  Studies show that a majority of abused prescription drugs are obtained from family and friends, including from the home medicine cabinet.

All the returned medications on Drug Take-Back day will be incinerated according to federal and state environmental guidelines.   

 

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Media Contact: [email protected]

Release ID: 17-439
Media Contact: Lucille Baur 240-777-6507