CDC Message: Practice Safe Medicine Storage Habits While Preparing for This Fall and Winter Virus Season
Published December 2, 2024
During fall and winter, when many of us are preparing for the holidays, we are also preparing for viral infections that go around. This time of year is a good time to remember to keep all medicines up and away and out of reach and sight of young children. This includes putting vitamins and other supplements, including those in gummy form, up and away too. Each year approximately 35,000 young childrenare rushed to the emergency room because they got into medicines that were left within reach.
Keep young children safe! Parents, grandparents, and other caregivers can follow these tips to safely store medicines:
Store medicines in a safe location that is too high for young children to reach or see.
Never leave medicines or supplements out on a kitchen counter or at a sick child’s bedside, even if you must give the medicine again in a few hours.
Always relock the safety cap on a medicine bottle. If it has a locking cap that turns, twist it until you can’t twist anymore or until you hear the “click.”
Tell children what medicine is and why you or another trusted caregiver must be the one to give it to them.
Never tell children medicine is candy, even if they don’t like to take their medicine.
Remind houseguests, babysitters, and other visitors to keep purses, bags, or coats that have medicines in them up and away and out of reach and sight when they’re in your home.
Call Poison Help at 800.222.1222 (or go to their website) right away if you think your child might have gotten into a medicine, vitamin, or other supplement, including those in gummy form, even if you are not completely sure.
For more medicine safety tips, visit the PROTECT Initiative’s up and away educational resources in English or Spanish.
Watch a short video on storing medicines up and away and out of sight and reach of children.
Get more Medication Safety news and updates by signing up for CDC emails here: Medication Safety News.
More Safety Articles
Don't Confuse Depakote with Depakote ER
Depakote (divalproex sodium) ER is a medicine used to treat seizure disorders, migraine headaches, and certain mental illnesses such as bipolar disorder. The "ER" part of the name stands for "extended release," meaning the contents of the medicine are released slowly, not all at once, after you take the medicine. So, Depakote ER should be taken just once a day.
A young woman developed temporary nerve damage 4 weeks after taking 500 mg of St. John's wort daily for mild depression. She began to feel pain on skin exposed to the sun. Her doctor told her to stop taking the herb. She did, and her symptoms slowly went away.
Do you carefully read the label on your prescription bottle and look at the tablets before you take a dose of a new or refilled prescription medicine? Well, a 95-year-old woman did, and it helped to prevent a potentially serious mistake. Her doctor had recently increased the dose of her thyroid medicine. When she needed a refill, a staff person at her doctor's office mistakenly told the pharmacist to dispense the lower dose she had taken previously.
FDA Campaign Aims to Protect Consumers from the Risks of Fake Online Pharmacies
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has recently launched a national campaign to raise public awareness about the prevalence of fraudulent Internet pharmacies, which can be dangerous to patient health, and to help consumers make safe purchases.