This is a national stage application filed under 35 USC 371 based on International Application No. PCT/AU2014/000644, filed Jun. 28, 2014, and claims priority under 35 USC 119 of Australian Patent Application No. 2013902426 filed Jun. 28, 2013.
THIS INVENTION relates to the assembly of a disposable blister pack and is more specifically, although not exclusively, concerned with reducing the risk of a blister pack being incorrectly assembled. Such a blister pack may contain prescribed medication doses for administration to a patient and it is important that errors are not inadvertently made during its assembly as this could result in a patient receiving the wrong medication doses with possibly disastrous consequences.
A disposable protected blister pack basically is assembled from three components described below and referred to hereafter as the “specified three components”.
The first component takes the form of a transparent blister sheet having manually-depressible blisters each containing prescribed medication doses which are sealed in the blisters by the second component.
The second component comprises a frangible backing sheet in adherent contact with the face of the blister sheet opposite to that from which the blisters extend. It is designed to be easily ruptured by the medication doses in a blister when the blister is manually depressed by the fingers of the patient. The medication doses within each blister are identified by printing on the exposed face of the backing sheet behind it.
The third component is a protective card which is securely attached to the blister pack and is folded around it when not in use to protect it from damage.
The second and third components each have information printed on them identifying a patient for whom the blister pack is intended and the prescribed medication doses contained in the blisters of the pack. Nevertheless it is still possible for a person charged with the responsibility of assembling the blister pack to inadvertently make an error resulting in a patient receiving medication doses from a pack intended for someone else. The risk of such errors occurring increases when the person is loading more than one blister sheet at a time or is otherwise distracted during the loading process.
An object of the invention IS to reduce the risk of errors occurring during assembly of a blister pack.
In accordance with a first aspect of this invention a method of assembling a blister pack having the specified three components mentioned above, includes the steps of transferring to a predetermined position on the first component one of two unique markings provided on the second component, loading prescribed medication doses into the mouths of the blisters of the first component, sealing the blisters by means of the second component, attaching the sealed blister sheet to a predetermined position on the third component, and finally confirming that the pack has been correctly assembled by correlating the respective markings on the three components with one another.
In accordance with a second aspect of the invention a disposable and protected blister pack comprising: a first component in the form of blister sheet; a second component in the form of a backing strip having a window and adhering to the back of the blister sheet to seal prescribed medication doses within its cavities; a third component in the form of a protective card provided with fold lines and attached to one marginal edge of the blister sheet; markings on all three components which identify the patient and prescribed medication doses contained in the cavities of the blister, the markings on the first component being framed in the window of the second component; and, one fold line on the card providing a hinge about which the pack can be turned to facilitate access to its upper and lower surfaces and thus the removal of medication doses from a selected blister of the pack.
The invention reduces the risk of a disposable blister pack being assembled from components intended for different patients.
The markings may take different forms. However the preferred form of marking is a binary code rather than a unique shape or pattern. Suitably the same binary code is used for all three markings although this is not essential as it is the relationship of the markings to one another which determines whether the protected blister pack has been correctly assembled. The marking common to all three components is conveniently that used to control apparatus for loading the blister cavities with the prescribed medication doses and for identifying the patient for whom the blister pack is intended.
A preferable way of arranging for the transfer of one of the two markings on the second component to the first component is to have it printed on an adhesive tab on the second component. The adhesive tab can then be transferred to a predetermined or designated position on the first component prior to its blisters being loaded with the prescribed medication doses. The location of the adhesive tab at the predetermined position on the first component also positions its marking. As the precise positions of the three markings is known, they can be identified easily by a suitable device such as a binary code reader, and to use the code reader too generate a signal which gives the operator a signal to indicate that the protected blister package has been correctly assembled.
In one arrangement of the invention the marking which is retained on the second component is positioned above the window framing the marking on the tab when attached at a designated to the first component. As long as the second component is correctly attached to the first component, the marking on the tab will appear in the window.
Images of sets of blocks may be provided adjacent the markings on the first and second components so that the block images will register with one another only if the second component is correctly positioned on the first component. Sideways misalignment of the images of the blocks indicates a sideways misalignment of the second component with respect to the first component, and a misalignment in a perpendicular direction is indicated by a foreshortening of the block images or by the complete disappearance of one set of blocks from the window.
It is convenient to arrange for the marking placed on the third component to be located at a position which enables the markings on all three components to lie in a common plane when the sealed pack is turned about the fold hinge. They can then be correlated with one another by a code reader in a single operation.
The invention will now be described in more detail, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying informal drawings, in which:
Referring to
The two positions at which the binary code markings 17 are printed on the backing strip 7 are, respectively, immediately above a rectangular window 21 and, on a tab 27 adhering to one marginal edge portion 18 of the backing strip 7. The tab 27 has an adhesive backing and can be manually detached from the underlying marginal edge portion 18 of the backing strip 7 and transferred to a designated position (not shown) on the blister sheet at which the code marking 17 on the tab 27 is visible in the window 21 of the backing strip 7 when the backing strip is correctly arranged to seal the prescribed medication doses in the blisters of the cavities beneath.
As shown in
The operator of the equipment types on the keyboard 1 the identification data of the patient and, if necessary, any changes to be made to the data information which is permanently stored in the memory of the computer and printer 2. The backing strip store 4 and the card store 3 then deliver to the printer 2 a blank card 9 and a blank backing strip 7. The printer is operated to print onto the card 9 and the blank backing strip 7 the binary code markings 8 and 17.
The tab 27 is then transferred from the backing strip to a predetermined position on the blister sheet which has been placed, blistered side downwards, on a loading table (not shown) to enable the medication doses prescribed to be dropped into the appropriate cavities of the blisters. The predetermined position for the tab 27 is conveniently provided by a shallow well 29 of the same shape as the tab and moulded out of the blister sheet. With the tab 27 in the predetermined position the code marking 17 on it should be displayed in the window 21 of the backing strip directly beneath the identical code marking 17 printed on the blister sheet.
The loading of medication doses into the blister cavities can be carried out by any one of a number of well-known arrangements for loading blisters and, as these are well-known in the art and do not form part of this invention, they will not be further described in this specification. When loading of the blister cavities has been completed, a cover slip (not shown) protecting the adhesive layer on the underside of the backing strip 7, is stripped off and the backing strip is applied onto the blister sheet and gently pressed down so that the adhesive layer on the underside of the backing strip 7 adheres to the blister sheet. The backing strip should then be held firmly in the desired position to seal the medication doses in the blisters.
If the binary code marking on the blister sheet and displayed in the window 21, is identical to that displayed on the backing strip above the window, the printing on the backing strip will correctly indicate the contents of the blister cavities beneath. Likewise if the identity of these binary code markings is the same as that printed on the card 9 alongside the blister pack, the correct protective card has been used for the blister pack.
As the reading of binary codes by eye to determine whether they are identical is difficult, the task may be simplified by providing two identical sets 31 of spaced, printed blocks shown in
If the blister sheet carrying the tab 27 is misaligned in the direction of the columns 12, 13 with respect to the backing strip 7, the blocks will either be foreshortened in size as represented in sketch B of
If the blister sheet is misaligned horizontally, for example towards the left as shown in sketch C of
Finally if the blister sheet is carrying a tab 127 which has a code marking 36 different from the code marking 17 appearing above the window 24, the set of blocks 33 will display a different pattern to the set of blocks 31 above the window 24, and this difference will again be visually apparent to the operator as is apparent from sketch D of
As the binary code markings appear in a common plane for checking, a code scanner can be used to scan all three markings and a light on the scanner used to indicate to the operator whether the markings match one another and whether the backing strip has been correctly applied to the blister sheet.
The card 51 is printed with an unevenly-spaced set of blocks 55 extending alongside the fold line 52, as shown. An identical set of blocks 56 is printed on the marginal portion of a backing strip 57 which has previously been folded around and attached to the marginal edge of a blister sheet forming the second component of the blister package 50.
Correct attachment of the blister package 50 to the card 51 is carried out as follows.
The cover slip protecting the adhesive stripe on the zone 54 is removed and the blister package 51 is inverted so that its blisters extend upwards and the set of blocks 56 are visible extending along its left-hand edge as shown in the scrap view. The set of blocks 56 is aligned with the set of blocks 55 printed on the card 51 and the left hand edge of the card is aligned with the fold line 52. The marginal edge of the blister package is then pressed down firmly on the adhesive stripe on the zone 54 to attach the blister package to the card 51.
The fold line 52 and the alignment of the sets of blocks 55 and 56 ensures that the blister package is located precisely at a carefully defined position so that when the protected blister package is located at the checking position of the checking equipment, the binary codes lie substantially in the same horizontal plane and are approximately aligned with one another so that they can be simultaneously checked for correct correlation. It is then easier to arrange for a signal to be generated by the equipment to indicate to the operator that the protected blister package has been correctly assembled.
From the above description it will be appreciated that the use of the invention reduces the risk of the operator inadvertently assembling the blister package incorrectly or in a way resulting in the patient receiving the wrong prescribed medication.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2013902426 | Jun 2013 | AU | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/AU2014/000644 | 6/23/2014 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2014/205480 | 12/31/2014 | WO | A |
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Entry |
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Australian Patent Office; International Search Report issued in application No. PCT/AU2014/000644; dated Aug. 5, 2014; Woden Act, Australia. |
European Patent Office, European Search Report for European App. No. 14818129.0 dated Feb. 7, 2017, 8 pages. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20160143810 A1 | May 2016 | US |