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Health & Medicine for Senior Citizens
NPR Reporter Finds There
May Be More Than One Expiration Date on Your Pill Bottle

Joanne Silberner is a health policy correspondent for National
Public Radio. She covers medicine, health reform, and changes in
the health care marketplace.
>>
Listen to her report this story on NPR |
Manufacturer's expiration
date can be two years later than the drug store expiration date
By
Joanne Silberner, National Public Radio
June 21, 2010 - It's a relatively common
occurrence: You open the medicine cabinet only to find the expiration
date on your prescription drugs has passed. But that doesn't necessarily
mean the medication has gone bad, says drug expert
Joe Graedon — who has a consumer call-in show on public radio.
Graedon says many state pharmacy boards require
that medications get labeled with an expiration date of one year after
the date of sale. So that's your pharmacist following state law or just
being extra cautious.
But Graedon says that one-year date on the bottle
can cause real confusion.
"People look on the expiration date, and they fear
that somehow those pills have gone bad or not going to work, and so they
throw them away," he says.
Then there's usually another expiration date: the
manufacturer's expiration date, which can be two years later than the
drug store date. It has some testing behind it - testing designed to see
how long the medicine stayed at full potency when stored under high heat
and humidity, like in your bathroom.
What's The Right Date?
Ilisa Bernstein of the Food and Drug Administration
says consumers should pay attention to the one-year expiration dates —
no exceptions.
"There may not be data to ensure that product is
safe and effective and has maintained its quality beyond the effective
date," Bernstein says.
But Bernstein admits that drugs stored under ideal
conditions can last longer than a year.
In fact, tests of Defense Department drug
stockpiles showed many medicines are fine as much as 10 years after the
manufacturers' expiration dates if they're stored unopened and in a cool
dry place.
Late last year, the independent newsletter The
Medical Letter pointed out that some drugs stored in much less favorable
conditions last a long time, too.
But the newsletter also said EpiPens used for
severe allergic reactions go bad quickly and shouldn't be used once
they've expired. To date, though, the FDA has no reports of adverse
events related to outdated drugs.
The bottom line on drug dates?
"If it's not a life threatening situation, if it's
perhaps for heartburn or maybe for a headache, I guess I would take the
pills," Graedon says. "If it's nitroglycerin for your heart, if it's a
really critical medicine for an irregular heart rhythm, I would get in
touch with a pharmacist and probably ask for a renewed prescription."
>>
More at National Public Radio’s (NPR) Website – read or contribute
comments about this report
>> NPR Home Page
>> Joe and Terry Greadon have a Website –
The People’s Pharmacy
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