Published
I have my own collection of expired epipens. Mostly I hold on to them so when I train staff and they want to try shooting a real one into an injector pad i can oblige (the trainer and the real epipens are really different experiences to shoot for someone who's never given a shot.). Granted, this is pretty rare and the number of expired epipens far exceeds my needs for so many epipens. For a short time we were able to send back to our distributor, but that's ended.
At the time a pen expires, I contact parents (for a replacement) and to give them the option of picking up the old one.
If they don't get it within the specified time frame (usually a few days), it's mine.
Some allergists tell parents that they can use them for 6 months after expiration (at home.) Obviously in the school setting, meds must be in date, but what they do at home is their business.
I also keep some for demonstration, but the newly expired ones (less than 6 months out of date) are accepted by a local medical mission, so our school nurses drop them off there.
As for other expired meds, I give parents the same option of picking them up within a few days. Otherwise, I destroy them. If narcotics are involved, I insist that the parents pick them up and sign for them.
If you have a cabinet full of 2 or 3 year old drugs, I would account for the narcotics, have a second person witness and waste the lot.
No school has the space nor should they take on the liability of storing unused medications.
Supernrse01, BSN
734 Posts
Morning all! I cleaned out the overstocked medication closet yesterday... they were meds in there from the previous nurse who hasn't worked within the District for 3 years. My question is, what do you do with the expired medications? Especially the Epi-pens? I bagged them all up for now, and locked them back in the closet.