Crime & Safety
Brick Police Collecting Unneeded Medication At Take Back Day
National Take Back Day aims to keep unneeded medications out of the hands of those who are battling addiction. Here's where to go.
BRICK, NJ — If you have medications you no longer need in your home, Brick Township police will be collecting them Saturday as part of the National Drug Take Back Day.
The nationwide effort, led by the federal Drug Enforcement Administration, aims to get unused and expired medications out of homes to prevent them from winding up in the streets or in the hands of those battling addiction.
Opioid deaths have increased during the coronavirus pandemic, with 87,200 Americans dying as a result of a drug overdose from Sept. 1, 2019 to Sept. 1, 2020, the most ever recorded in a 12-month period, according to the Centers for Disease Control.
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The DEA started the national Take Back Day 10 years ago and said the effort has brought in more than 6,800 tons of prescription medication, including nearly 500 tons in October 2020. Those medications are incinerated.
With studies indicating a majority of abused prescription drugs come from family and friends, including from home medicine cabinets, clearing out unused medicine is essential, DEA officials said.
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Brick Township police will be at Walmart on Route 88 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. with a secure collection container. Residents can turn in tablets, capsules, patches, and other solid forms of prescription drugs. Liquids (including intravenous solutions), syringes and other sharps, and illegal drugs will not be accepted. Vaping devices and cartridges can be turned in provided lithium batteries are removed. Personally identifying information on the prescription bottles can be removed as well.
New Jersey residents turned in more than 18,000 pounds of unwanted, unused or expired prescription medications in October 2020, and have turned in almost 300,000 pounds since the program inception in 2009, the DEA said.
For those unable to get to Walmart on Saturday, Brick Township police have a Project Medicine Drop secure drop box in the lobby at police headquarters. Dropoffs can be done anonymously.
There are a number of other efforts Brick Township Police are making to help combat the opioid epidemic as well. Police Chief James Riccio recently sat down with Gregory Andrus of Portraits of the Jersey Shore for an interview and spoke about the department's Blue HOPE program, along with education efforts to deter children from experimenting with drugs.
Watch it here, published with permission of Gregory Andrus:
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