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‘Prescription Drug Take Back Program’ Collects Record Number of Drugs

The Boone County Sherriff’s Department collected a record 972 pounds of medication in last weekend’s “Prescription Drug Take Back” event.

The Sherriff’s Department set up seven collection locations throughout Boone County, on Friday and Saturday, where residents could drop off unwanted or leftover medication.

The program is held twice a year and has averaged 500 to 600 pounds of prescription drugs in the past, but this year’s increase in participation helped surpass last April’s record of 895 pounds, according Boone County Sherriff’s Department Major Tom Reddin.

“The first year we did this, in 2010, we collected maybe something over 100 pounds, 120 pounds’ worth of meds,” Reddin said. “But this thing has grown and it’s become hugely popular and I get phone calls months ahead of the events wanting to know, ‘Hey, when’s your next one?’ and all this other kind of stuff.” 

Reddin said it takes about 353 pills to make a pound of medication, so the weekend’s event took roughly 343,000 pills off Boone County’s streets. 

“It gives the community a way for them to be properly disposed of, [it] prevents these medications from falling into hands where they might be used inappropriately, become abused. And it also keeps it out of the environment, as medications are often flushed down the toilet,” Reddin said.

Reddin said he is glad the program is popular with the public, and added that the Sherriff’s Department will continue to run the event at least two times a year in conjunction with the Drug Enforcement Administration.

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