Compartments in current medication dispensers are associated with a discrete time of the day that one or more medications in the compartments are taken. For example, if a person is taking a medication twice per day, two compartments are used, one for each time the medication is intended to be taken. In current rotary medication dispensers, compartments are presented one at a time in a sequential order. If there are 14 compartments, for example, and if the aperture is exposing compartment 7, then at the next medication dispensing time, the aperture would expose the adjacent compartment 8 and so on. In order to avoid taking the wrong medication, this dispenser must be filled with an understanding of the operation of the dispenser such that desired medications are dispensed at the correct time.
Current medication dispensers are accordingly loaded differently depending on when the medication is loaded. For example, if a dispenser is loaded after the first time medications are taken during the day, then the dispenser must be loaded with the knowledge that these medications have been taken. If a user of the dispenser is unaware of what medications have been taken, a point of failure is introduced in loading the desired medication.
Concepts presented herein relate to approaches for loading a medication dispenser. In one aspect, a medication schedule is obtained and compartments for medication to be positioned in the medication dispenser are identified. A particular medication is selected to be loaded and an indication is provided of the compartment that will hold the particular medication.
The control assembly 118 is operatively coupled with the display screen 110 and drive member 120. The display screen 110, in one embodiment, is a touch screen that receives input from a user and displays information related to loading and operation of the medication dispenser 100. The drive member 120 is coupled with a motor (not shown) of the control assembly 118 to rotate about the central axis A. During operation, as directed by the control assembly 118, the drive member 120 is coupled with the cassette 112 to rotate the cassette 112 about the central axis in order to align one of the plurality of compartments 114 with aperture 108. After aligning one of the plurality of compartments 114 with the aperture 108, drive member 120 can rotate cassette 112 to expose filled compartment 116.
The drive member 120 is thus configured to rotate the cassette 112 to a plurality of discrete positions about the central axis A and relative to the screen 110. In the illustrated embodiment, the cassette 112 includes 15 discrete positions about the central axis, one for each compartment 114 and one for the covered compartment 116. In order to locate the cassette 112 relative to the drive member 120, a slot 130 is positioned within the cassette 112. The slot 130 cooperates with a corresponding projection 132 such that, upon rotation of the drive member 120, cassette 112 rotates therewith. The control assembly 118 includes at least one processor and memory to store information regarding the cassette 112 as well as medication to be dispensed according to a medication schedule.
In one embodiment, the cassette 112 includes a home or reference position relative to the display screen 110. For example, the reference position can be selected as that position where covered compartment 116 is exposed relative to the second aperture 108. Control assembly 118 maintains the position of the cassette 112 in memory so as to be able to instruct a person loading dispenser 100 on the display screen 110 into which compartment 114 a selected medication should be loaded. Using the control assembly 118, the display screen 110 is configured to display information about each of the plurality of compartments 114, including an identifier for each compartment in immediate proximity to each compartment. During loading of the dispenser 100, the identifier for each compartment can be highlighted or otherwise provide an indication of medication to be positioned within the adjacent compartment.
Current dispensers can cause an error if a cassette is loaded after medication has been dispensed and the status of a compartment is unknown. Dispenser 100, using control assembly 118, can assist in ensuring cassette 112 is loaded in a consistent manner, regardless of the time a day the cassette 112 is loaded. To this end, the control assembly 118 can store a number of times that medications are taken throughout a day as well as a status (e.g., loaded, empty) of medication within each compartment 114. In the event medications are taken 3 times a day, control assembly 118 can be configured to ensure a 14 compartment cassette would always be filled with day 1 of a cycle dedicated to compartments A, B and C (e.g., A being dedicated to morning medications, B being dedicated to noon or midday medications and C being dedicated to evening medications), day 2 of a cycle dedicated to compartments D, E, and F, day 3 of a cycle dedicated to compartments G, H and I and day 4 of a medication cycle dedicated to compartments J, K and L. If desired, compartments M and N can also be utilized as dictated by control assembly 118. In another embodiment, compartments M and N can be skipped altogether. Using information from a medication schedule, dispenser 100 can automatically bypass a compartment if the compartment contains medication that is not the correct one to be dispensed.
In another example, in a 14 compartment cassette where medications are taken twice a day, compartments A and B can be dedicated to the first day of a medication cycle, compartments C and D being dedicated to the second day of a medication cycle and so on, with compartments M and N being dedicated to the seventh day of a medication cycle. In this example, compartment A is dedicated to morning medication and compartment B is dedicated to evening medication and further compartments are dedicated to a particular time of the day accordingly.
To dispense medication, the control assembly 118 operates drive member 120 to present a particular compartment through aperture 108 upon a selected time according to a medication schedule. Various approaches can be used to determine if medication has been taken. For example, the control assembly 118 can include an accelerometer and/or weight sensor to determine if dispenser 100 has been flipped over or if medication is no longer present within a selected compartment. In one embodiment, if medication has not been taken within a selected time interval after being presented through aperture 108, the control assembly 118 can operate drive member 120 to expose filled compartment 116 and keep the remaining compartments under cover 102. When dispenser 100 determines that medication has been taken, the status of the particular compartment can be updated to “empty” or an equivalent status identifier.
To prevent exposing medications within a compartment during rotation of cassette 112, dispenser can use an accelerometer or other mechanism to ensure that the aperture 108 is facing upright while rotating. In the embodiment illustrated, medication is difficult to remove without inverting the dispenser 100. Accordingly, unwanted access to medications as the cassette 112 rotates can be prevented.
Once the medication is loaded into the individual compartments, the loading of the compartments is verified at step 210. The verification can take many forms such as acknowledgement from a user through a user interface or through a sensor (e.g., a weight sensor, optical sensor or the like) that determines presence of medication within the compartments. In order verify if the right medications are present in the cassette 112, a suitable weight sensor can be used to determine total weight of medication that is loaded to the cassette 112. For example, a series of sensors placed underneath cassette 112 could be used to determine the weight of medication loaded into the cassette. As medication is loaded into the cassette 112, the change in weight with each medication could be recorded and compared to an expected weight from a database of medications to determine if the correct medication was loaded. If there were any deviations from the expected weight, a notification can be sent of the possible error and additional checks can be enforced. After verification, method 200 proceeds to step 212, where it is determined if other medications need to be loaded. If further medications need to be loaded, method 200 returns to step 206 to select the further medications. If all the medications are loaded, method 200 ends.
The method 200 can end, in one embodiment, when the cover 102 is positioned on the base 104. After the cover 102 is positioned on base 104, the dispenser operates to dispense medication according to the medication schedule. Dispensing can be performed depending on a time of day that method 200 is complete. For example, if method 200 is performed after morning medications have been dispensed, dispenser 100 is operated to next dispense afternoon medications. In one embodiment, method 200 can be performed at a pharmacy or medication refilling center wherein a known medication schedule is utilized and a loaded cassette 112 is sent to an end user. In another embodiment, the cassette 112 is loaded by a user or a caretaker. In any event, the cassette 112 can be consistently loaded and include the same medications in the same compartment.
In order to adapt to varying medications schedules (once a day versus twice a day, etc.) general labelling (herein embodied as letters A-N) for a 14 compartment cassette can be used. The general labelling can further be associated with a dynamic guide (e.g., printed on paper, displayed on a computer screen communicatively coupled with the dispenser 100 or directly on display screen 110) that identifies what medications go into what labelled compartment. Further still, labelling for each compartment can be positioned directly on the cassette 112.
With particular reference to medication schedule 250, for the medication “Amoxil”, each of the compartments A-N are highlighted in the compartment section 256. Accordingly, when loading the dispenser 100 with Amoxil, an indication can be provided to loading of Amoxil within each compartment. Alternatively, with respect to the medication “Aspirin” in medication list 252, every other compartment is highlighted, namely, compartments A, C, E, G, I, K and M. When loading the dispenser 100 with Aspirin, an indication can be provided to only load Aspirin within these identified compartments. Accordingly, errors in medication loading can be reduced as the cassette is loaded consistently regardless of a time that the cassette is loaded.
With reference to
In addition to the indicators positioned on display screen 110, various other mechanisms can be used to assist in loading cassette 112. In
In further embodiments, an adapter can be used to assist in loading cassette 112. In
In yet a further embodiment, illustrated in
Various embodiments of the invention have been described above for purposes of illustrating the details thereof and to enable one of ordinary skill in the art to make and use the invention. The details and features of the disclosed embodiment[s] are not intended to be limiting, as many variations and modifications will be readily apparent to those of skill in the art. Accordingly, the scope of the present disclosure is intended to be interpreted broadly and to include all variations and modifications coming within the scope and spirit of the appended claims and their legal equivalents.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional App. Ser. No. 62/396,150, filed filed Sep. 17, 2016, and is further a continuation in part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 29/563,171, filed May 3, 2016, the contents of both of the aforementioned applications being hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety. This application is further related to co-pending U S. patent application Ser. No. 15/707,858, (Attorney docket #38893.10002US02) filed on even date herewith, the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
62396150 | Sep 2016 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 15707996 | Sep 2017 | US |
Child | 16458792 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 29563171 | May 2016 | US |
Child | 15707996 | US |