This invention concerns a packaged supply of individual doses of a personal care product, e.g., a medication, as, for example, an oral medication that is in the form of a strip of water-soluble film that contains a pharmaceutically active material.
Personal care products can be formulated in individual dosage units, e.g., as tablets or capsules to be swallowed, as lozenges or strips of water-soluble film to be allowed to dissolve in the mouth, or as strips of bioadhesive film composition for treating wounds. Sometimes it is important that each dose be segregated from the others—i.e., that the doses not all be held in the same bottle or vial. This might be the case, for example, if the formulation can be deleteriously affected by humidity, e.g., if the formulation is hygroscopic. Also, if the form of the dosage is such that the patient could easily, and unknowingly, take two dosage units at one time, when only a single unit was prescribed, it might be desired to package each dose individually. The present invention is directed to a convenient, effective way of doing so.
According to the present invention, a packaged supply of individual doses of a personal care product is comprised of the combination of:
a) a tray;
b) a plurality of substantially identical packets uniformly stacked in the tray, each packet having a pouch portion that holds a single dose of the personal care product and a tab portion releasably connected to the pouch portion;
c) retention means for holding the tab portions of the stacked packets in the tray; and
d) a cover that is movably connected to the tray, the cover being movable between a closed position in which the stack of packets is enclosed within the tray and an open position in which the pouch portion of the topmost packet on the stack is sufficiently exposed that its front edge can be gripped, allowing the pouch portion to be pulled away from the tab portion to which it is connected, thereby releasing that pouch portion from the tray.
Preferably each packet is comprised of two flexible sheets that are partially laminated together so as to define a closed pocket between the sheets, in which the dose is held. Such constructions are sometimes called “blister packages.” The sheets may be made, for example, of one or more layers of foil, plastic film, and/or paper. Preferably the sheets are water resistant, and they can be airtight as well. A preferred metal foil is aluminum foil. As suitable plastic films may be mentioned films made of poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET), polyolefin, acrylonitrile polymers, and copolymers of ethylene and an ethylenically unsaturated carboxylic acid, e.g., acrylic acid. Suitable polyolefins include nucleated polypropylene, low density polyethylene, and high density polyethylene. Suitable acrylonitrile polymers include copolymers of acrylonitrile and methyl acrylate, e.g., the Barex® barrier resins. Suitable ethylene/unsaturated acid copolymers include those wherein the acid groups are partially neutralized with zinc or sodium ions, e.g., the Surlyn® packaging resins.
As suitable paper may be mentioned wax paper.
The tab portion and pouch portion of each packet may be connected by various means, e.g., by releasable adhesive strips, by hook and loop fastener strips, or by the two portions being constructed out of one sheet of material (on each side) and that material being thin enough that the pouch portion can be torn away from the tab portion. Thus, the pouch portion and tab portion can meet at a boundary zone along which the two portions can be torn apart by pulling, thereby releasing the pouch portion from the tray.
In the tear-apart embodiment, it is preferred that the boundary zone have tear-facilitating means that tend to confine the tear line to that zone when the pouch portion is torn away from the tab portion. Examples of tear-facilitating means include a score line in the sheet material, a perforated line therein, and a tear-directing notch in an edge of the packet at one or both ends of the boundary zone. If the boundary zone contains a layer of paper, preferably a perforated line will be used. If a score line or a perforated line is used, preferably it will run across the entire width of the packet. If a tear-directing notch is used, preferably two will be employed, one at each end of the boundary zone. This will make tearing as easy for lefthanders as for righthanders.
A tear-directing notch can be either a simple slit in the sheet material or a gap created by the removal of material, e.g., in a V shape.
Another way to help keep the tear line straight as it traverses across the width of the packet—i.e., keep it in the boundary zone—is to use sheet material that more easily tears in that direction than in directions perpendicular thereto. Thus, for example, the sheet material can be oriented or striated film.
In the tear-apart embodiment, preferably a minor portion of each pocket will extend into the packet's boundary zone, so that when the pouch portion is torn away from the tab portion along the boundary zone, the pocket is automatically opened along the tear line. This reduces the number of steps required to remove the pouch portion from the tray, open it, and withdraw the personal care product. A single act of tearing the pouch portion away from the tab portion serves also to open that end or edge of the pocket. Sometimes, however, if the pocket is only opened at that one edge, it may be difficult to withdraw the product. This might be the case, for example, where the product is in a form that will not easily fall out of the pocket, e.g., a strip of web material. Especially if one wants to use a thumb and forefinger to extract the product, that might be easier to do if the pocket were opened wider. To facilitate opening the pocket wider, the front edge of the pouch portion can have tear-facilitating means that enable the pouch portion, once released from the tray, to be manually torn into two segments along a second tear line, one that extends from the pouch's front edge to the tear line created when the pouch was pulled away from the tab portion. The pocket should straddle this second tear line, so that when the released pouch portion is torn in two, along that line, the pocket is further opened. Preferably the second tear line will divide the pocket into a major area and a minor area, with the major area constituting about two-thirds or more of the total area of the pocket, e.g., 75 or 80% thereof. In this way, the product will be less likely to fall out of the pocket, and maybe onto the floor, as the second tear line is being created.
In the case of a personal care product in strip form, it is preferred to locate the strip in the pocket in a position away from both tear lines, e.g., to center it in the pocket. In that way, the strip will not interfere with the tearing operation, nor will it be torn in two itself.
The packets and the pockets can be in any shape, but they will be generally easier and cheaper to manufacture if they are both rectangular.
The tray-and-cover assembly also can be in any desired shape, e.g., rectangular, oval, round, trapezoidal, triangular, or irregular. However, to conserve space the assembly preferably matches, at least approximately, the outline of the packets stacked within the tray. Since it generally is more economical to manufacture such packets in rectangular shapes, it follows that the preferred shape of the tray and cover also is rectangular.
The tray-and-cover assembly preferably is small enough and thin enough that it can readily fit in a purse or pocket. For example, it might have a thickness in the range of about 0.25 to 1 inch, a width of about 1 to 5 inches, and a length of about 1 to 5 inches. Thus, for example, the assembly might have a thickness of about 0.5 inch, a width of about 2 inches, and a length of about 3 inches.
The tray preferably has a fixed cover that partially covers one of the tray ends and has a free edge that is intermediate the two ends of the tray. The tab portions of the stacked packets, and the means that retain the tab portions in the tray, preferably both lie underneath the fixed cover. With this arrangement, the device can include a special feature that will help deter the first tear line from straying into the tab portion of a packet when the attached pouch portion is being pulled away. This feature is an elongate, downward-protruding crest member on the underside of the fixed cover. It is located above, and substantially parallel to, the boundary zone of the topmost packet on the stack. In this embodiment the fixed cover is sufficiently flexible that by thumb pressure on the top thereof, the crest member can be pressed against the stack of packets, at the boundary zone, and held there while the pouch portion is torn away. This creates a line of pressure across a substantial portion of the width of the packet, and that pressure line obstructs the tear line from passing underneath the crest member. In other words, it helps keep the tear line straight. The bottommost surface of the crest member can be flat, rounded, or pointed. This arrangement is preferable to one in which the stack of packets is at all times clamped tightly between some top member and the bottom of the tray. Use of such a clamping mechanism places some portion of the device under constant tension, thereby requiring sturdier materials and/or risking a rupture of the parts during shipping, storage, or use.
The movable cover can be slidably mounted on the tray or it can be hingedly connected thereto. If a fixed partial cover also is used, preferably an edge of the movable cover will rest against the free edge of the fixed cover when in the closed position. If a hinge is used to connect the movable cover to the tray, it can be on either side of the tray, or at an end of the tray, or, if a partial fixed cover is used, the movable cover can be hingedly connected to that, at the free edge of the fixed cover.
Preferably, the device will include latch means for releasably holding the movable cover in the closed position. Any such means can be used, including, for example, a swingable latch, a slidable latch, or an interfering-fit latch. Especially preferred is an arrangement in which the partial fixed cover is used and the movable cover is hingedly connected to the tray, for example along one of the sides or at the end opposite the fixed cover. In this arrangement the latch preferably is of such a design that it can be released by thumb pressure on the top of the fixed cover. Preferably the design is such that such downward pressure will not only cause the latch to release but also cause the movable lid to pop open. Even if it pops only slightly open, that will be beneficial, in that it will make it easier to grasp the moving edge of the cover with the tip of one's forefinger and pull the cover all the way open. Also, if the crest member feature is used, the one action of pressing down on the fixed cover with the thumb of one hand can serve to simultaneously pop open the movable cover and depress the crest member into the stack of packets, making everything ready for the topmost pocket portion to be grasped by the other hand and torn out of the container, in a substantially straight tear line.
If appropriate for the contents, the device may include child-proof latch means, i.e., a latch mechanism that requires application of two different forces at once, in order to open the movable cover. Thus, for example, in addition to the pressure-release latch on the top of the fixed cover, there can be a second pressure-release latch that has to be simultaneously activated, in order for the movable cover to be opened. The second latch may be located, for example, on one of the sides of the tray, in such a manner that, to release the movable cover, finger or thumb pressure has to be simultaneously applied to both the top of the fixed cover and the side of the tray. With such an arrangement one can grip the tray in one hand, with the thumb and forefinger on opposite sides of the tray, and, with the other hand, simultaneously press down on a cover portion with thumb pressure to release the other latch.
Any type of retention means can be used to hold the tab portions of the stacked packets in the tray. A clamping mechanism can be used, for example, or the tab portions can have one or more holes that allow the packets to be mounted on one or more posts. The posts can be attached to the bottom of the tray and/or, if they are located underneath a partial fixed cover, they can be attached to the underside of the fixed cover. Alternatively, the tab portions can be glued or adhesive-taped to the tray.
As for clamping mechanisms, they can either be normally engaged or normally nonengaged. If normally nonengaged, they can be designed so that they are engaged by throwing a lever or applying pressure, e.g., thumb or finger pressure. Thus, for example, the retention means can even be the aforementioned crest member on the underside of the tray's fixed cover. When the crest member is pressed down, onto the stack of packets, that can act to hold the tab portions of the stacked packets in the tray, while the pouch portion of the topmost packet is pulled away from the tab portion to which it is connected.
Preferably the movable cover is made of transparent plastic. In that embodiment the top surface of the pouch portion of each packet can be imprinted with the name of the personal care product, and that name will be visible even when the movable cover is closed, due to the cover being transparent. This makes it unnecessary to incur the cost of also printing the name of the product on the movable cover or, if one is used, the fixed cover.
Examples of suitable transparent plastics that can be used to make the movable cover. (as well as the tray and fixed cover) are transparent polyolefins, such as homopolymers or copolymers of propylene, e.g., propylene-butylene random copolymers.
It also is preferred that ingredient information and directions for using the product be printed on the bottom surface of each packet.
The invention perhaps will be better understood by considering the accompanying drawings, which depict one illustrative embodiment of the invention. Referring to the drawings:
As shown in
As depicted in
Another type of product that can be held in the pocket between sheets 11 and 12 is a wound-treating composition in the form of a film. Such films are disclosed, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 6,329,343 B1, issued Dec. 11, 2001, which also is incorporated herein by reference.
Pouch portion 15 of each packet is connected to tab portion 17, which contains two post holes 18. V notches 19 and 20 are in the boundary zone between pouch portion 15 and tab portion 17 of the packet. The notches define an imaginary tear line 21, shown as a broken line in
As shown in
Movable cover 27 is connected to tray 23 by a living hinge 28 at the front edge of tray 23. The free edge of fixed partial cover 26 ends in a down turned lip 29. The unhinged moving edge 35 of cover 27 rests against lip 29 when cover 27 is closed.
When cover 27 is open, as shown in
Also, if the user prefers, the two tears can be made in reverse order. That is, pouch portion 15 can be torn from notch 34, as shown in
To help align movable cover 27 with fixed cover 26 when in the closed position, cover 27 is equipped with dogs 31, near the unhinged moving edge of cover 27. Dogs 31 nest behind corresponding dogs 32, which are integral with, and extend upwardly from, the inside walls of tray 23.
As shown in
In the embodiment shown in
In
While the invention has been explained by a detailed description of certain specific embodiments of it, it is to be understood that various modifications and/or substitutions may be made without departing from the spirit of the invention. Accordingly, the invention should not be deemed limited by the detailed description of the embodiments set out above, but only by the following claims.
The present application claims the benefit of priority under 35 U.S.C. § 120 as a continuation to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/427,047 titled “PACKAGED SUPPLY OF INDIVIDUAL DOSES OF A PERSONAL CARE PRODUCT” filed Apr. 30, 2003, U.S. Pat. No. 6,708,826 the entire disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10427047 | Apr 2003 | US |
Child | 10772899 | US |