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  • 1.  OTC Medication Expiration

    Posted 12-14-2023 09:48

    We have a current discussion regarding the expiration of OTC medications such as multi-dose OTC Tylenol and Ibuprofen.  Do you go by the standard 28 day after opening or use manufacturer's expiration date?  If you have a reference I would greatly appreciate it.  It seems to be variable across our clinics and we would like to standardize. TIA!



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    Cie Cascone MSN RN
    Corp Clinical Educator
    Spira Care
    Kansas City MO
    (816)365-3368
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  • 2.  RE: OTC Medication Expiration

    Posted 12-15-2023 11:32

    The clinic group I work for uses the expiration date on the bottle or liquid OTC medications like Tylenol, Benadryl, Ibuprofen, etc. I was trying to find anything we had in writing about this, but I cannot find it. I just remember there was a discussion about whether it was 28 days or the printed expiration date and our supervisor told us we go by the expiration date. 



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    Melissa Ropella
    Clinic Triage Nurse
    Fairview Medical Group
    Burnsville MN
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  • 3.  RE: OTC Medication Expiration

    Posted 12-15-2023 15:05

    No-OTC oral medications do not go by the "multi-dose vial" 28 day rule. They can be used through until manufacturer's expiration date.

     

    However, you should be aware that the ISMP does consider pedi oral meds a "high risk" category---so, you should consider labeling them as "high risk" because of the potential for dosing errors with weight based dosing.

     

    The only multi-dose vials we have in our organization that we use that must be dated are our lidocaine vials (when we cannot get single use), and our ppd solution. Per the manufacturer, the ppd solution is good for 30 days once the vial is opened.

     

    I keep a policy of expiration dating so that staff can use the cheat-sheet to help them with appropriate labeling, and this goes over what does and does not need to be labeled with an open/exp date.

     

    Hope that is helpful!

    Mary

     

    Ps. One other little factoid---did you know that EKG tabs often expire once the packages are open? McKesson brand expires 45 days after you open a package of them-so, we put them in a Ziploc bag to keep them sticky, and then label with open and 45 day later expiration.

     

     

    Mary Blankson, DNP, APRN, FNP-C, FAAN

    Chief Nursing Officer

    Community Health Center, Inc.

    675 Main Street,

    Middletown, CT, 06457

    Cell: (860)227-5432

    mary@chc1.com

     


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