Crime & Safety

Got Drugs? Turn Them In This Saturday

East Lyme, Old Lyme, and Lyme are all participating in the sixth National Prescription Drug Take-Back Day on April 27.

A Press Release from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. 

After collecting more than 1,000 tons of expired, unwanted prescription medications at previous events over the past three years, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and local law enforcement will hold a sixth National Prescription Drug Take-Back Day on Saturday, April 27.  

East Lyme, Old Lyme, and Lyme are all participating in this event. You can drop off prescription medicines at East Lyme Police Department on Main Street, Niantic, and at Old Lyme Fire House on Lyme Street, in Old Lyme anytime from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Only solid medicines may be turned in. No liquids, injectables or needles will be accepted. The service is free and anonymous, no questions asked.

The public has embraced the opportunity these Take-Back Day events provide to prevent pill abuse and theft by ridding their homes of potentially dangerous expired, unused, or unwanted prescription drugs. Local law enforcement agencies in thousands of American communities have partnered with the DEA in the previous five events that have taken place since September 2010.  

Unused medications in homes create a public health and safety concern, because they are highly susceptible to accidental ingestion, diversion, misuse, and abuse. Rates of prescription drug abuse in the U.S. are alarmingly high—more Americans currently abuse prescription drugs than the number of those using cocaine, hallucinogens, and heroin combined, according to the most recent National Survey on Drug Use and Health. 

The majority of abused prescription drugs are obtained from family and friends, including from the home medicine cabinet, according to surveys of users.  

Four days after DEA’s first Take-Back event 30 months ago, Congress passed the Secure and Responsible Drug Disposal Act of 2010, which amends the Controlled Substances Act to allow an “ultimate user” of controlled substance medications to dispose of them by delivering them to entities authorized by the Attorney General to accept them. 

The Act also allows the Attorney General to authorize long term care facilities to dispose of their residents’ controlled substances in certain instances. DEA is in the process of finalizing regulations to implement the Act. 

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