The present invention relates to a package for containing separate items, such as pills, tablets, doses of medicine, or the like, and more particularly, the present invention relates to a package including an outer sleeve, carton, or case housing a blister card in a manner providing child-resistant, senior-friendly dispensing properties.
By way of general example, paperboard packages including a blister card are disclosed by U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,896,161 B2 issued to Reilley et al. and 8,066,121 B2 issued to Sack et al. which are assigned to AndersonBrecon Inc., the assignee of the present application.
Although the above referenced paperboard packages may be satisfactory for their intended purpose, additional package designs able to provide desired dispensing properties and enabling cost efficient manufacture are desired.
The present invention should become apparent from the following description when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
A fully assembled package 10 according to an embodiment is shown in
Typically, the package 10 is provided of a size that can be readily held in the hand of an intended end user and that contains a predetermined number of doses or tablets. By way of example, the blister card 14 in the illustrated embodiment is designed to contain fourteen tablets 20 in fourteen separate blister compartments 18. Of course, the number, shape, pattern, and size of blister compartments 18 and tablets 20 can be altered from that illustrated.
The package 10 as shown in
The blister card 14 may be provided in various forms. In the illustrated embodiment, the blister card 14 is made from a generally planar card 16 molded in a manner forming a plurality of integral, separate, spaced-apart, upstanding blister compartments 18 providing a plurality of separate hollow compartments in which a tablet, pill or other small article 20 can be loaded. A backing 22 can be applied to the card 16 to seal tablets 20 loaded on the blister card 14 in the upstanding blister compartments 18.
The plurality of separate blister compartments 18 permit a tablet 20 to be dispensed from one compartment 18 without disturbing the other blister compartments 18 of the blister card and the remaining tablets 20 stored on the blister card. The card 16 and blister compartments 18 can be formed of a thermoplastic material that may be transparent and the backing 22 may be formed of a thin layer of foil and/or a layer of paperboard having push through chads formed therein as discussed in greater detail below. Of course, other materials and blister card configurations and structures may be used.
In
Before the blister card 14 is inserted into the outer sleeve 12 (see
The first wall panel 32 includes a plurality of separate, individual, spaced-apart tear-away tabs 38. The tabs 38 may form part of the panel 32 and be defined therein by a pattern of perforations. In the illustrated embodiment, a total of fourteen separate tabs 38 are provided in two rows, 40 and 42, with seven tabs 38 in each row and correspond to the positions of the blister compartments 18 on the blister card 14 as retained in the outer sleeve 12. Accordingly, each tab 38 is positioned such that is extends directly above or is vertically aligned with one of the upstanding blister compartments 18 within the outer sleeve 12.
Each tab 38 may also have an end portion 44 extending on one of the sidewalls 28 and 30 of the outer sleeve 12 for providing a ready means for initiating removal of a tab 38 by the end user. The end portion 44 enables a finger of the user to push a tip of the tab 38 on a sidewall of the outer sleeve 12 inwardly to fracture the tip of the tab 38 so that the tab 38 can then be pinched or gripped and peeled away from the surrounding first wall panel 32 as shown, for instance, by
As stated above, each tab 38 is located such that it is aligned with a top of one of the upstanding blister compartments 18 of the blister card 14. Thus, as best shown in
In a likewise manner, a series of separate push-through, break-away chads 46 may be formed in the backing 22 or on the second wall panel 34. For example, the chads 46 may be formed on the backing 22 the second wall panel 34 may be provided with a series of apertures aligned with the chads 46. Alternatively, the chads may be formed in the second wall panel 34. As a further alternative, the second wall panel could comprise two panels folded together with an inner panel including the chads and an outer panel including apertures. Each chad 46 is positioned such it aligns with one of the blister compartments 18. Each chad 46 is designed to require a pre-determined amount of force to be applied thereto (i.e., by pushing downwardly on the top of the blister compartment 18 and tablet 20) before the chad ruptures and permits a tablet 20 to pass through the second wall panel 34.
In the illustrated embodiment, each chad 46 is defined by a series or pattern of perforations 48. Accordingly, the material and thickness of the material of the backing 22 and/or the second wall panel 34 and the pattern and shape of the perforations 48 defining each chad 46 can be selected to ensure that the chad 46 does not rupture until a pre-determined amount of force is applied. For example, each chad 46 can be designed to break when a minimum of about ten to about fourteen pounds of pressure is applied to the chad 46 via finger pressure applied in a downward direction on the corresponding blister compartment 18 and tablet 20 via the opening provided by a removed tab 38.
Accordingly, for purposes of dispensing a tablet 20 from a blister compartment 18, a tab 38 corresponding to the blister compartment location is removed from the first wall panel 32 to enable access to the upstanding blister compartment (opposite the backing 22). The user then applies an appropriate amount of force on the blister compartment 18 to push the tablet 20 such that it breaks through the corresponding chad 46 and exits the package 10 through the broken chad location. These tasks and the dexterity needed to accomplish these tasks in sequence are not readily able to be accomplished by a young child, but can be readily accomplished by an adult or senior citizen.
After a first tablet is dispensed, the remaining tablets remain protected within the outer sleeve 12 and are not accessible via the previously removed tab 38 or pushed through chad 46. For purposes of dispensing a second tablet, the above steps need to be performed again (tab removal followed by pressure applied on exposed blister compartment to rupture the backing and corresponding chad). This sequence of steps is required to be repeated for each tab/blister compartment/chad combination. Thus, the removal of one or more tablets does not destroy the child-resistance dispensing property for tablets remaining within the package 10.
The cover flap 36 extending from the outer sleeve 12 provides an additional mechanism for preventing undesired dispensing of tablets 20 from the package 10. The flap 36 can be pivoted between positions permitting and preventing tablets 20 to be dispensed from the package 10. For instance, in a closed position as shown in
When dispensing is desired, the cover flap 36 must first to be unlocked and pivoted to the open position as shown in
Accordingly, dispensing requires the following steps: the cover flap 36 being pivoted away from the second wall panel 32; a tab 38 being peeled away to expose a blister compartment 18; and a sufficient amount of pressure being applied to the blister compartment 18 needed to push through a tablet to rupture the corresponding chad 46.
As best shown in
As best shown in
In one contemplated embodiment, the outer sleeve 12 is made from a blank of paperboard or like sheet material. For example, the sheet material can be a SBS (solid bleached sulfate) paperboard stock material of a desired thickness. This type of material can be provided in a relatively flat blank form on which panels, fold lines, cutouts, openings, perforations, or the like can be readily formed, die cut, and/or defined.
The material of the blank may be capable of being coated with a continuous or discontinuous layer of a heat and/or pressure activated adhesive at desired locations for purposes of forming the sleeve or carton shape. For instance, adhesive may be provided at locations corresponding to the end-wall flaps forming the end-walls, 24 and 26, and at a side flap 58 used to form the hollow outer sleeve configuration. Further, certain sides of the blank may be provided as being glossy or otherwise of a desired texture and/or appearance for forming the visible external surfaces of the package 10.
Although the use of paperboard is discussed above, it should be understood that other materials can also be utilized, such as, molded materials, composite materials, multilayered materials, plastic materials, metal foils, paper, or the like. According to one contemplated embodiment, the materials used to form the package 10 are recyclable materials such that after all tablets have been dispensed from the package, the package 10 can be recycled in its entirety.
Various modifications to the package and its method of assembly can be used. For instance, the number, shape and configuration of the various panels and flaps of the blank forming the outer sleeve 12 can be altered. The shape, size and/or pattern of the perforations, cutouts, tabs, chads, and the like can be changed. Different types of adhesives and other means to bond the panels of the carded package together can be used. Different materials within a range of different thicknesses can be used. The shape, location and configuration of the blister compartments, chads, tabs, and support rib of the blister card can be altered.
While a package and method of manufacture have been described in detail, various modifications, alterations, and changes may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the package and method according to the present invention as defined in the appended claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3305077 | Greif | Feb 1967 | A |
4125190 | Davie, Jr. | Nov 1978 | A |
4537312 | Intini | Aug 1985 | A |
5042472 | Bunin | Aug 1991 | A |
5150793 | Tannenbaum | Sep 1992 | A |
D337725 | Bunin | Jul 1993 | S |
5339960 | Price | Aug 1994 | A |
5549204 | Toren | Aug 1996 | A |
7000769 | Killinger | Feb 2006 | B2 |
7331460 | Barndt et al. | Feb 2008 | B2 |
7735650 | Zumbiel | Jun 2010 | B2 |
D623948 | Levy | Sep 2010 | S |
7798328 | Hession | Sep 2010 | B2 |
7896161 | Reilley et al. | Mar 2011 | B2 |
8066121 | Sack et al. | Nov 2011 | B2 |
8079475 | McArthur et al. | Dec 2011 | B2 |
8091708 | Loftin | Jan 2012 | B2 |
8328018 | Sack et al. | Dec 2012 | B2 |
20030209558 | Cross | Nov 2003 | A1 |
20050274643 | Arnold | Dec 2005 | A1 |
20070151894 | Gherdan et al. | Jul 2007 | A1 |
20080093252 | Hession | Apr 2008 | A1 |
20080202972 | Prud'Homme | Aug 2008 | A1 |
20080277311 | Wang | Nov 2008 | A1 |
20090107873 | Cotton | Apr 2009 | A1 |
20090301924 | Rondeau | Dec 2009 | A1 |
20100084308 | Rigby | Apr 2010 | A1 |
20110210036 | Jones | Sep 2011 | A1 |
20140339121 | Gelardi | Nov 2014 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20140305834 A1 | Oct 2014 | US |