Device for pharmacy prescription shelf use to store medications and information related to the medications
The present invention is a device or system for providing printed medication-specific informational and promotional materials to patients or customers in conjunction with filling a prescription medication. The device or system of the present invention is designed to make efficient use of a pharmacy prescription shelf. A container tray is formed with forward recesses to hold medication supply containers. The forward recesses are preferably molded to specifically receive medication supply containers. The tray is also formed with a rearward recess to hold an upright sleeve containing informational material comprising information related to the medication in the supply container. The tray and sleeve construction permits the pharmacist to readily identify and access the medication supply container and simultaneously view and access the informational materials.
Latest Patents:
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention generally relates to devices and systems configured to hold goods, articles, or materials, and particularly devices and systems in which goods, articles, or materials are displayed or arranged to facilitate use or storage. More specifically, the present invention relates to containers for two or more diverse articles or materials, wherein at least one of the contents is a sheet bearing indicia, a card, or a pamphlet. The present invention also relates to tray-type containers for supporting diverse cooperatively useful articles in two or more specifically contoured cells.
2. Background of the Invention
Generally, when a pharmacist or pharmacy staff member fills a prescription, the prescribed medication is manually dispensed from a supply container, such as a bottle or box. A pharmacist or a pharmacy staff member removes the supply container from a pharmacy shelf, dispenses the medication, and then returns the supply container to the pharmacy shelf. Such manual filling of prescriptions must be done efficiently in order that patients or customers may obtain their prescribed medications as quickly as possible. To that end, efficient organization of pharmacy shelves is a high priority.
Once the pharmacist or the pharmacy staff has dispensed a given prescribed medication, the pharmacist is generally required to provide information about the prescribed medication to the patient or customer. The required prescription information, in general, relates to dosage, potential side effects, and other useful and necessary information relating to the efficacy and possible toxicity of the medication. However, the pharmacist and the pharmacy staff are mostly too busy to provide the required prescription information, particularly by speaking directly to the patients or customers. Therefore, required prescription information is usually only available in printed information sheets, pamphlets, and/or brochures. Although some of this information may be printed from the pharmacy computer, which makes it readily available to the pharmacist, it is often desirable to augment this information with pamphlets, brochures, and other materials. However, there are two problems the pharmacist has with these additional materials: 1) There is no room behind most pharmacy counters to store informational materials, and no system for doing so, and 2) being pressed for time in having to fill numerous prescriptions, the pharmacist and pharmacy staff are often unable to spend the time necessary to locate the appropriate printed information sheets, pamphlets, or brochures if stored somewhere else. Thus, there is a need to resolve this adverse situation.
Furthermore, the pharmaceutical company that produces the prescribed medication may desire to provide promotional material to the patient or customer at the time the prescription is filled. Again, there is no room for storage of such materials behind the pharmacy counter, and the pharmacist and pharmacy staff are unable to spend the time necessary to locate the appropriate promotional material if stored elsewhere since the pharmacist and pharmacy staff are, as previously stated, pressed for time in having to fill numerous prescriptions.
In the unrelated product display art, it was known to provide a bracket adjacent the edge of a shelf to support products for display to the consumer, such product display art constructions are disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,321,475 to Glanz, and U.S. Pat. No. 4,201,291 to Davidson.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONIt is an object of the present invention to provide a device or system for storing information sheets and promotional material in conjunction with storing a particular medication, where the pharmacist and pharmacy staff can conveniently retrieve them while filling a prescription. This unique combination resolves the objection pharmacists have to storing informational materials on the pharmacy shelf, thereby displacing product, since the material is combined with product storage. It is also an object of the present invention to provide an information storage device or system as aforesaid that makes efficient use of existing space on the pharmacy shelf.
The present invention is a device or system for providing printed medication-specific informational and promotional materials to patients or customers in conjunction with filling a prescription medication. The device or system of the present invention is designed to be placed on a pharmacy shelf. Further, this invention provides access for many types of informational material in the area behind the pharmacy counter that has traditionally been off limits to informational material.
A container tray according to the present invention is disposed on a pharmacy prescription shelf, preferably adjacent to the shelf edge. The container tray is formed with forward recesses to hold medication supply containers. The forward recesses are preferably molded to specifically receive medication supply containers of a specific shape and size. Significantly, the container tray is also formed with a rearward recess to hold an upright sleeve or box containing removable brochures or other printed information about the medication in the medication supply container. The sleeve may also hold removable brochures related to promotions by the pharmaceutical company that produced the medication in the medication supply container. The tray and sleeve construction permits the pharmacist to identify and access the medication in the supply container and simultaneously view and access the pamphlets.
The pharmacist who fills the prescription first removes the supply container from the tray, dispenses the medication into a prescription bottle or container, replaces the medication storage container in the tray, removes a brochure from the sleeve, and simultaneously gives both the prescription bottle and the information sheet or brochure to the patient or customer, for example, in a bag. As an advantage, the system of the present invention reduces the problem of lost, misplaced, or discarded information sheets, which is a perennial problem in the restricted space behind the pharmacy prescription counter, and helps the pharmacist and pharmacy staff to remember to distribute information with the prescription.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Referring to the Figures and
Referring to
Forward recesses 23 and 24 are defined by front wall portion 16, side wall portions 17 and 18, lateral partition 21, and longitudinal partition 22. A rearwardly disposed recess 25 is defined by side wall portions 17 and 18, rear wall portion 19, and lateral partition 21. Recesses 23, 24, and 25 are generally rectilinear. Recesses 23 and 24 are generally the same size, and recess 25 is generally about four times the size of either recess 23 or 24. Nonetheless, the exact size and shape of recesses 23, 24, and 25 are dictated by their intended purpose as further described below. Likewise, the exact size and shape of container tray 10 is dictated only by the size and shape of recesses 23, 24, and 25. Preferably, the forward portion of container tray 10 is about 3 inches as measured between rearward recess 25 and front edge 11.
Container tray 10 may be made with any suitable material, such as paper, card stock, paperboard, cardboard, plastic, and/or metal. Preferably, container tray 10 is a molded thermoplastic material that maintains its shape over time under continuous and regular use. A broad range of moldable thermoplastic materials are within the contemplation of the present invention. A particularly preferred thermoplastic material for use in the present invention is high density polyethylene. Tray 10 may be formed or molded by means well known in the plastic article manufacturing arts.
Referring to
Sleeve 30 may be made of any suitable material, such as paper, card stock, paperboard, cardboard, plastic, or metal. Preferably, sleeve is made of a cardboard-like material that can maintain its shape over time under continuous and regular use. A particularly preferred cardboard-like material for use in the present invention is corrugated cardboard having a suitable bursting strength, puncture resistance, and edgewise crush resistance to retain its structure in use. Sleeve 30 may be readily manufactured by means well known in the cardboard and box construction arts.
Referring to
Referring to
A plurality of informational materials 50 are slidably received and removeably held in sleeve 30. Preferably, informational materials 50 are of a size and shape to be slidably received and removeably held in their respective upright position, such that any texts on the front side of informational materials 50 are easily readable by the pharmacist or pharmacy staff while looking at device 1; Significantly, informational materials 50 contain information relating to the medication in medication supply containers 63 and 64. Sleeve 30 is preferably adapted to hold or contain about 30 to about 50 documents.
Referring to
One advantage, of the present invention is to reduce the problem of lost, misplaced, or discarded information materials, which is a perennial problem in the restricted space behind the pharmacy prescription counter. The present invention assists the pharmacist and pharmacy staff in remembering to provide informational materials with the prescription.
Having thus described a presently preferred embodiment of the present invention, it will be appreciated that the objects of the invention have been achieved, and it will be understood by those skilled in the art that changes in construction and widely differing embodiments and applications of the invention will suggest themselves without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. The disclosures and description herein are intended to be illustrative and are not in any sense limiting of the invention.
Claims
1. A device for pharmacy prescription shelf use to store medications and informational materials related to the medications comprising:
- a sleeve adapted to receive and removably hold a plurality of informational materials related to a medication;
- a tray adapted to hold the sleeve in juxtaposed proximity to a medication supply container that contains the medication;
- whereby informational materials disposed in the sleeve may be simultaneously retrieved with medication from the medication supply container.
2. The system of claim 1, said container tray having a length defined between its respective front and rear edges, and said pharmacy prescription shelf having a width defined between its respective front and rear edges, wherein the length of the container tray is substantially equal to the width of the pharmacy prescription shelf, whereby the front edge of the container tray is disposed substantially at the front edge of the pharmacy prescription shelf.
3. The system of claim 1, said container tray being formed with a rearward recess specifically sized to receive the sleeve, and at least one forward recess specifically sized to receive a particular medication supply container.
4. A device for pharmacy prescription shelf use to store medications and informational materials related to the medications comprising:
- a sleeve adapted to receive and removably hold a plurality of informational materials comprising information related to a medication;
- a tray comprising means for holding a medication supply container that contains the medication and further comprising means for holding the sleeve in juxtaposed proximity to a medication supply container;
- whereby a user may locate the medication supply container and the documents, and subsequently provide both a supply of the medication and one of the plurality of informational materials to a person requesting the supply of the particular medication.
5. The device of claim 4, wherein the sleeve and the tray are formed so that the informational materials and medication supply container are simultaneously viewable by the user when the tray is disposed on a pharmacy shelf adjacent the forward edge thereof.
6. A system for pharmacy prescription shelf use to store medications and informational materials related to the medications comprising:
- a pharmacy prescription shelf; and
- a device comprising: a sleeve adapted to receive and removably hold a plurality of informational materials comprising information related to a medication; a tray comprising means for holding a medication supply container that contains the medication and further comprising means for holding the sleeve in juxtaposed proximity to a medication supply container; whereby a user may locate the medication supply container and the documents, and subsequently provide both a supply of the medication and one of the plurality of informational materials to a person requesting the supply of the particular medication.
7. The system of claim 6, wherein the sleeve and the tray are formed so that the informational materials and medication supply container are simultaneously viewable by the user when the tray is disposed on the pharmacy shelf adjacent the forward edge thereof.
Type: Application
Filed: Jul 14, 2004
Publication Date: Sep 1, 2005
Applicant:
Inventor: Richard Vastola (Pleasantville, NY)
Application Number: 10/890,728