Community Corner
Dispose Of Unwanted Drugs In Nanuet On National Take Back Day
Get them out of the house before they fall into the wrong hands or join the stew of discarded pharmaceuticals dissolved in the Hudson River.

NANUET, NY — National Rx Take-Back Day is April 27, and there are several places near Nanuet where you can dispose of unwanted, unneeded or expired medications.
This is the time to clean out drawers and cabinets of expired drugs or medications you no longer use, before they fall into the wrong hands or add to the stew of discarded pharmaceuticals found dissolved throughout the Hudson River.
Rockland residents will be able to bring medications to the following locations where police along with volunteer community agencies will be on hand to take the substances, no questions asked, and dispose of them in an environmentally safe way.
Find out what's happening in Nanuetfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The federal Drug Enforcement Administration's motto for medications is "Keep them safe. Clean them out. Take them back."
This is the 26th national Take Back Day. In October, for the 25th annual event, 300 tons of medications were collected nationwide — making the total over a quarter-century 8,950 tons.
Find out what's happening in Nanuetfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

This initiative addresses a couple of vital public safety and public health issues.
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. The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration’s National Survey on Drug Use and Health shows year after year that most misused and abused prescription drugs are obtained from family and friends, including someone else’s medication being stolen from the home medicine cabinet.
In addition, Americans are now advised that their usual methods for disposing of unused medicines — flushing them down the toilet or throwing them in the trash — both pose potential safety and health hazards.
Researchers in 2018 mapped out a stew of discarded pharmaceuticals dissolved throughout the Hudson River. Scientists based at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory say that in some places, levels may be high enough to affect aquatic life.
The medications — antibiotics, cholesterol and blood-pressure meds, acetaminophen and a dozen more — are believed to enter the river through sewage outfalls after people excrete unmetabolized doses, or when they flush unused pills or dump medicine down the drain.
Riverkeeper helped researchers test the water in 2016. They used the Ossining-based environmental watchdog's vessel to sample 72 sites along the river twice each, in May and July. Particularly high levels were found at the sewage outfalls in Orangetown in Rockland County, Yonkers in Westchester County, and Kingston in Ulster County.
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