The present invention relates to pill containers or boxes, and more particularly to a pill container designed to accommodate dosable solid products for convenient storage/carry, and dispensing.
Pill containers, also known as pill boxes, are cases for housing medications such as pills, tablets, or capsules. Such cases can be used to store and dispense pills such as in a pharmacy or may be made compact to function as personal pill containers used by consumers not only to store and dispense pills but also to carry pills such as in a purse, pocket, or the like.
Personal pill containers allow users to pack limited individualized dosages of one or more medications, and thus enable convenient short-term carry. Since the number or amount of dosages held in such personal pill containers is normally limited, the user must periodically refill the container typically from standard pill containers supplied by the pharmacist. Such small, pocket-sized pill containers, which have been used for years, allow the user to pre-fill the container with medication to be dispensed for that day, and to conveniently carry it with them. These personal pill containers have been found to enhance the ease and regularity of administration by reminding the user of the proper time for dispensing of pills in a more consistent manner. In addition, their small size and compact profile make them especially convenient for individuals needing to take medications at scheduled intervals.
Personal pill containers are typically fabricated to include multiple compartments, which are generally individually accessible by the user through a corresponding closure. Each compartment is adapted to receive and retain a single grouping or dose of one or more medications to be taken at a particular time, which may be individually identified by indicia printed on the closure. In this manner, the personal pill containers can be implemented to enable users to take their medication at the appointed times. While traditional personal pill containers facilitate the prompting of use and transportation of medications, such containers have been found to be inadequate when the user is required to take more than one kind of medication at different time intervals during the day. In such an instance, the user often may not be able to distinguish the different medications, and thus, may erroneously take the medications at improper times.
Accordingly, there is a need for pill containers, which are capable of accommodating one or more dosable ingestible products typically in the form of pill medications which may be administered at same or different time intervals and/or groupings during the day, while maintaining ease of use and storage and carry convenience.
The pill containers may be made compact so that they can function as personal pill containers and therefore be convenient to carry by the user.
The present invention relates generally to a pill container having multiple compartments designed to hold several groupings or doses of one or more ingestible products such as medications for convenient storage and when in the form of a personal pill container, easy to carry. Each of the multiple compartments is designed to form a single area for holding a single pill grouping, or be easily converted into multiple areas for separately holding multiple pill groupings. The multiple compartments may further include indicia to assist the user to identify the pills contained therein and when in the form of a personal pill container, which dosages are to be administered at a particular scheduled time. The pill container of the present invention also permits the user to visually determine whether a particular grouping or dose had been taken. The present invention further provides the user with a simple tool to organize, store, and remember the proper schedule for administering medication, all within a personal pill container that is compact so that is may be readily carried in a pocket, purse or the like.
In one aspect of the present invention, there is provided a pill container comprising:
at least one compartment for receiving and retaining at least one pill; and
means operatively associated with the at least one compartment for reversibly partitioning each compartment into separate compartment portions.
In a more particular aspect of the present invention, there is provided a pill container comprising:
a plurality of compartments arranged radially from one another, each of the plurality of compartments adapted for receiving and retaining at least one pill and reversibly secured by a corresponding closure; and
a movable tab located in each of the plurality of compartments, each movable tab configured to reversibly move from a first position to a second position within the corresponding compartment and partition the compartment into two compartment portions.
The following drawings in which like reference characters indicate like parts are illustrative of embodiments of the invention and are not intended to limit the invention as encompassed by the claims forming part of the application.
The present invention is directed generally to a pill container suitable for storing and dispensing one or more medications. In one aspect of the invention, the pill container is in the form of a personal pill container for storing and dispensing medication, and which can be easily carried by the user. The personal pill container will typically include some indication of the day and time a medication should be taken. Reference herein to pill container shall include personal pill containers.
The personal pill container of the present invention allows the user to customize the configuration of the medication storage and dispensing area as desired in a simple and easy manner. In one form of the present invention, the pill container includes multiple compartments each configurable for storing a single grouping or several groupings of medications. The pill container can readily be modified through a simple mechanism to accommodate within a compartment a single grouping of medication for yielding a single dispensable dose or multiple groupings of medication, each of which can be maintained in a pill compartment portion or area. With the separate pill compartment portions, the user can easily administer each grouping of medication in the proper dosage at different time intervals as required. The pill container of the present invention may be designed and dimensioned especially for use by pharmacists to store and dispense pills and with respect to personal pill containers to store, dispense and carry medications making the personal pill container especially useful for individuals exhibiting limited finger dexterity such as those suffering from the symptoms of arthritis. The pill container of the present invention is simple and cost efficient to fabricate and to implement.
With reference to
The pill container 10 is useful for storing and dispensing dosable ingestible products including but not limited to medications, vitamins, nutraceuticals, and pharmaceutical compositions such as in the form of pills, tablets, capsules and the like. The pill container 10 includes one or more individual compartments for storing a single grouping of pills or multiple groupings of pills, which may be divided into smaller compartment portions as hereinafter described.
It is understood that the number of compartments can vary depending on the number or groupings of pills, or combinations of pills to be stored and carried, and also depending on the time period needed for such storage and dispensing. The compartments of the pill container 10 are adapted to be converted through a simple actuation means as hereinafter described for converting a single pill compartment for storing a single grouping of pills to multiple compartment portions each portion holding one of a multiple grouping of pills in a separate discrete arrangement, with each of the storage compartments and portions thereof preferably dimensioned to accommodate enough pills, tablets and/or capsules to suit the user. It will be understood that when the pill container is used by a pharmacy the storage capacity of each storage compartment will be greater than the compartment for the personal pill containers. A “grouping” is defined herein to encompass one or more ingestible products that may be the same or different and may be intended to be dispensed at the same time.
The pill container 10 includes a disc-like body 12 having a top components 14A, a bottom components 14B (as best shown in
The storage area of the compartment 18 is defined by the lid 16, opposed dividers 20, a back wall 24 and a base section 22. In the present embodiment, the body 12 of the pill container 10 includes seven lids 16 for enclosing seven corresponding compartments 18. In one embodiment, each of the compartments 18 may correspond to a day of the week on which the user can administer the pills that may be contained therein.
Referring specifically to
Referring to
The compartment assembly 38 forms part of the bottom component 14B, and includes a central hub 40 from which the back wall 24 of the compartments 18 is formed in the assembled pill container 10, and the dividers 20 arranged in a radially spaced apart relationship around the hub 40 and supported by the bottom component 14B. The compartment assembly 38 is configured to mate with the lower portion of the flange assembly 36. Each of the movable tabs 32 of the flange assembly 36 is positioned between adjacent dividers 20 of the compartment assembly 38. The cover assembly 34 is positioned relative to the compartment assembly 38 with each of the dividers 20 aligned between adjacent lids 16.
With reference to
With reference to
The foregoing discussion discloses and describes merely exemplary embodiments of the present invention. One skilled in the art will readily recognize from such discussion, and from the accompanying drawings and claims, that various changes, modifications and variations can be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the following claims.
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3393795 | Covert, Jr. | Jul 1968 | A |
4083452 | Rossmo | Apr 1978 | A |
4261468 | Krebs | Apr 1981 | A |
5782359 | McAllister et al. | Jul 1998 | A |
5921395 | Alexander | Jul 1999 | A |
6126010 | Kogen | Oct 2000 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050269237 A1 | Dec 2005 | US |