NEW ORLEANS - Americans nationwide did their part to drop off a record number of unused, unwanted or expired prescription medications during the DEA’s 15th annual National Prescription Drug Take Back Day, at close to 6,000 sites across the country.
Together with a record-setting amount of local, state and federal partners, DEA collected and destroyed close to one million pounds, nearly 475 tons, of potentially dangerous expired, unused, and unwanted prescription drugs, making it the most successful event in DEA history.
This brings the total amount of prescription drugs collected by DEA since the fall of 2010 to 9,964,714 pounds, or 4,982 tons. DEA’s New Orleans Field Division, which covers Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Arkansas, collected 43,138 pounds, over 21 tons of potentially dangerous expired, unused and unwanted prescription drugs for disposal at collection sites throughout the division.
The amounts collected for each state within the NOFD was the following:
Louisiana – 4,800 pounds
Mississippi – 4,455 pounds
Alabama – 6,074 pounds
Arkansas – 27,809 pounds.
“National Prescription Drug Take Back Day is a day for every American, in every community across the country, to come together and do his or her part to fight the opioid crisis – simply by disposing of unwanted prescription medications from their medicine cabinets,” said DEA Acting Administrator Robert W. Patterson. “This event – our 15th – brings us together with local, state and federal partners to fight the abuse of prescription drugs that is fueling the nation’s opioid epidemic.”
“In the midst of this horrific opioid epidemic, where we’re losing over 116 people a day, it’s absolutely critical that we all get unused, expired prescription drugs out of homes and dispose of them safely at these Drug Take-Back events,” said DEA Special Agent in Charge Stephen G. Azzam. “Residents in this four-state region took an important step in reducing the risk of prescription drug abuse in their communities by turning in over 43,000 pounds of medications from their homes. DEA thanks the public for their immense support to this effort to keep these drugs out of the wrong hands.”
Now in its ninth year, National Prescription Drug Take Back Day events continue to remove ever-higher amounts of opioids and other medicines from the nation’s homes, where they could be stolen and abused by family members and visitors, including children and teens. This initiative addresses a vital public safety and public health issue. Medicines that languish in home cabinets are highly susceptible to diversion, misuse and abuse. Rates of prescription drug abuse in the U.S. are alarmingly high, as are the number of accidental poisonings and overdoses due to these drugs. Studies show that a majority of abused prescription drugs are obtained from family and friends, including from the home medicine cabinet.