The present invention relates to packaging systems and, more particularly, to systems for storing, retrieving, and packaging pharmaceuticals.
In one embodiment, the invention provides a system for storing and packaging pharmaceuticals. The system includes a frame configured to store cassettes that contain pharmaceuticals and a cassette-moving assembly coupled to the frame. The cassette-moving assembly is operable to move relative to the frame to retrieve the cassettes from the frame. The system also includes a dispensing area positioned adjacent the frame to receive the cassettes from the cassette-moving assembly. The dispensing area is operable to selectively open the cassettes. The system further includes packaging equipment in communication with the dispensing area. The packaging equipment includes a feed stock roll for forming pouches. The packaging equipment is operable to fill the pouches with pharmaceuticals that are dispensed from the cassettes in the dispensing area. The system also includes a control system coupled to the cassette-moving assembly and the packaging equipment to control operation of the cassette-moving assembly and the packaging equipment.
In another embodiment, the invention provides a system for storing and retrieving pharmaceuticals. The system includes a storage unit having a frame configured to store cassettes that contain pharmaceuticals and a cassette-moving assembly coupled to the frame. The cassette-moving assembly is operable to move relative to the frame to retrieve the cassettes from the frame. The system also includes a packaging unit having a dispensing area positioned adjacent the frame of the storage unit to receive the cassettes from the cassette-moving assembly. The dispensing area is operable to selectively open the cassettes. The packaging unit also has packaging equipment operable to package pharmaceuticals that are dispensed from the cassettes in the dispensing area and a chute extending from the dispensing area to direct pharmaceuticals that are dispensed from the cassettes toward the packaging equipment.
Other aspects of the invention will become apparent by consideration of the detailed description and accompanying drawings.
Before any embodiments of the invention are explained in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangement of components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the following drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or of being carried out in various ways.
In the illustrated embodiment, the system 10 includes a storage unit 14 and two automatic packaging units 18. The storage unit 14 stores a plurality of cassettes 22, or containers or canisters, containing a variety of pharmaceuticals. The packaging units 18 package pharmaceuticals from those cassettes 22 into pouches for distribution to patients. In some embodiments, the system 10 may include fewer or more packaging units 18. Additionally or alternatively, the packaging units 18 may be positioned on both sides of the storage unit 14. For example, the system 10 may include four packaging units 18, with two units 18 positioned on each side of the storage unit 14. Such an arrangement allows multiple, independent packaging units 18 to access the same pharmaceutical array.
As shown in
The gantry assembly 30 is coupled to the frame 26 for retrieving cassettes 22 from within the frame 26. The gantry assembly 30 is a cassette-moving assembly that is operable to move the cassettes 22 within the frame 26. The illustrated gantry assembly 30 is similar to the gantry assembly disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/870,045, filed Aug. 27, 2010 and published as U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2011/0054668, the entire contents of which are incorporated by reference herein. The gantry assembly 30 includes a track 34 and a robotic head 38 that is operable to move along the track 34 to retrieve the cassettes 22. The track 34 is movable horizontally within the frame 26 to align the robotic head 38 with a specific column of cassettes 22. The robotic head 38, or carriage assembly, is movable vertically along the track 34 to align with a specific row of cassettes 22. When the robotic head 38 is aligned with the desired cassette 22, the head 38 grabs the cassette 22 and carries the cassette 22 to one of the automatic packaging units 18, as further described below. The robotic head 38 can also retrieve a cassette 22 from the packaging unit 18 and return the cassette 22 to the proper column and row within the frame 26.
In some embodiments, the packaging units 18 may include rollers, castors, or other types of wheels. The wheels allow a user to roll the packaging units 18 toward and away from the storage unit 14 in a modular fashion. Such an arrangement provides redundancy by allowing each of the units 18 to quickly and easily be replaced. In addition, the packaging units 18 may be interchanged if pharmaceuticals need to be packaged in a different size and/or type of container.
The illustrated dispensing area 46 is positioned on top of the cabinet 42 adjacent the frame 26 of the storage unit 14. The dispensing area 46 temporarily stores a series of active cassettes 22A that are used to fill the pouches within the cabinet 42. In the illustrated embodiment, the dispensing area 46 stores up to twenty active cassettes 22A at a time. Such an arrangement allows a pouch to be filled with twenty different pharmaceuticals. In other embodiments, the dispensing area 46 may store fewer or more active cassettes 22A. The illustrated dispensing area 46 includes motors and sensors that are temporarily connected to each of the active cassettes 22A. For example, one motor and one sensor may electrically connect to each active cassette 22A to selectively open and close the cassette 22A and to monitor the amount (e.g., number, volume, etc.) of pharmaceuticals being dispensed from the cassette 22A. When open, the cassettes 22A drop pharmaceuticals into the pouches. In the illustrated embodiment, the pharmaceuticals are dispensed from the cassettes 22A via gravity. In other embodiments, the packaging equipment may generate a vacuum to draw the pharmaceuticals out of the cassettes 22A. Metering devices may also be coupled to each active cassette 22A to help control the amount of pharmaceuticals being dispensed.
In some embodiments, the automatic packaging unit 18 may include an inspection device that inspects the pharmaceuticals before they are packaged in the pouches. After the pharmaceuticals come out of the active cassettes 22A, the pharmaceuticals may be temporarily collected in an intermediate catch basin. A sensor (e.g., a camera, etc.) may inspect the pharmaceuticals in the basin based on, for example, color, shape, infrared images, shape recognition, or pill imprints. The sensor may alternatively inspect the pharmaceuticals with spectrography, magnetic resonance, or the like. Once the pharmaceuticals are verified, the pharmaceuticals can be released from the basin into the corresponding pouch. Inspection of the pharmaceuticals may be entirely automated or may involve a person (e.g., a remote operator who views images of the pharmaceuticals).
The control system 50 is electrically coupled to the packaging equipment and the gantry assembly 30 to control operation of the packaging system 10. In particular, the control system 50 coordinates movement of the gantry assembly 30 to move the cassettes 22 between the storage unit 14 and the packaging unit 18, controls operation of the feed stock roll 54 to release a pouch, and controls when the active cassettes 22A positioned in the dispensing area 46 are opened and closed. The illustrated control system 50 includes a monitor 70 mounted to a shelf 74 that extends from the cabinet 42. The control system 50 may also include a processor, a memory, and an input device (e.g., a keyboard) that allows a user to interface with the system 50. In some embodiments, the monitor 70 may include a touch screen.
Referring back to
After the proper cassettes 22 are positioned in the dispensing area, the packaging equipment within the cabinet 42 fills a pouch with the desired pharmaceuticals. For example, a single pouch may be filled with a week's supply of assorted pharmaceuticals for a particular patient. By connecting two packaging units 18 to the storage unit 14, a user (or multiple users) can simultaneously input data and fill two pouches with pharmaceuticals for different patients. In some embodiments, the packaging equipment may include a printer to print a patient's name, the date, the amount and type of pharmaceuticals contained within, a bar code, or other indicia on the pouches. Once a pouch is filled and labeled, the pouch is dropped into the corresponding tote 66.
As the pouches are being filled, the control system 50 tracks and monitors the amount and types of pharmaceuticals within the system 10. For example, the control system 50 can verify that a user is authorized to retrieve certain pharmaceuticals, that a patient has a prescription for a particular pharmaceutical, and the quantity of pharmaceuticals remaining in each cassette 22. The control system 50 can also track where a particular cassette of pharmaceuticals is positioned within the system 10 (i.e., whether the cassette 22 is currently stored in the storage unit 14 or one of the dispensing areas 46, and in which row and column of the frame 26 the cassette 22 belongs).
In some embodiments, the filling of orders can be optimized by the control system 50. For example, a user can input all of the orders that need to be filled by the system 10 in a given day. The control system 10 can then determine in which order to process those orders to minimize the number of times the cassettes 22 move between the storage unit 14 and the dispensing areas 46 of the packaging units 18. In other embodiments, the control system 50 may optimize the orders such that all of the orders for a particular patient or facility are filled consecutively. In further embodiments, the user may program the control system 50 so that a particular order is filled immediately and/or the orders are filled in the order in which they were requested.
In still further embodiments, the control system 50 can be programmed to fill a spool of pouches with the same drug or other pharmaceutical. For example, the control system 50 can fill a series of 50 to 500 pouches with an individual drug or narcotic for pharmacies, nursing homes, hospitals, or other facilities to keep as stock drugs in emergency drug kits.
As shown in
The illustrated packaging system 10 increases the speed at which pouches of pharmaceuticals can be filled at an on-site facility and reduces the possibility of errors when filling those pouches. In the illustrated embodiment, the system 10 can achieve a throughput of up to ninety pouches per minute, including verification, for each automatic packaging unit 18 included in the system 10. The automated system 10 also avoids cross-contamination caused by mixing pharmaceuticals between pouches.
In some embodiments, the automatic packaging units 18 may operate separately from the storage unit 14. In such embodiments, each packaging unit 18 may be a standalone packaging system for use in smaller pharmacies or other low-volume facilities. In addition, the dispensing areas 46 of the packaging units 18 may be manually stocked, as needed, to fill specific pharmaceutical orders.
Referring back to
Each packaging unit 114 includes a motor base 134 positioned adjacent the frame 126 of the storage unit 114 and a chute 138 coupled to and extending from the motor base 134. The motor bases 134 are offset from the other shelves of the frame 126 and include ledges 142 for supporting active cassettes 122A. The illustrated motor bases 134 are only offset from the other shelves a relatively short distance to reduce the range of horizontal movement required by the gantry assembly 130 to place cassettes 122 on or remove cassettes 122 from the ledges 142. In the illustrated embodiment, each motor base 134 supports up to twenty active cassettes 122A at a time in a single, horizontal row. In other embodiments, each motor base 134 may support fewer or more active cassettes 122A and/or the motor bases 134 may be configured to support the active cassettes 122A in multiple rows (e.g., two rows of ten, three rows of seven, etc.). Each motor base 134 includes one or more motors operable to open the active cassettes 122A to dispense the pharmaceuticals stored within the cassettes 122A. The motor bases 134 thereby provide dispensing areas for the active cassettes 122A.
As shown in
The chutes 138 direct pharmaceuticals from the motor base 134 toward packaging equipment of the corresponding packaging unit 118. The motor bases 134 are positioned generally above the packaging equipment such that pharmaceuticals slide down the chute 138 toward the packaging equipment. In the illustrated embodiment, the chutes 138 are funnels that are generally triangular and may be formed of, for example, stainless steel. In some embodiments, each chute 138 may include a cover to inhibit pharmaceuticals from bouncing out of the chute 138. In such embodiments, the cover may be formed of, for example, clear plastic to help visually monitor operation of the system 110. In addition, the cover may be easily liftable or otherwise separable from the chute 138 to facilitate cleaning the chute 138. In some embodiments, each chute 138 may include discrete tracks (e.g., raceways or pathways) to direct pharmaceuticals from the corresponding outlets 154 in the motor base 134 toward the packaging equipment.
The packaging equipment of the automatic packaging units 118 collect the pharmaceuticals from the chutes 138 and package the pharmaceuticals into pouches. In the illustrated embodiment, each packaging unit 118 includes a receptacle 158 that communicates with the corresponding chute 138. The receptacle 158 collects all of the desired pharmaceuticals from the different active cassettes 122A before delivering the pharmaceuticals in a single group to the packaging equipment. A camera 162 is coupled to the receptacle 158 to take photographs of the pharmaceuticals as the pharmaceuticals pass into the packaging equipment. In some embodiments, multiple cameras may be coupled to the receptacle 158 to take photographs of the pharmaceuticals from different reference angles. The photographs can be checked by a pharmacist remotely or on-site to verify that the correct pharmaceuticals are being packaged.
In other embodiments, a camera (or other sensor) may be positioned at each outlet 154 in the motor base 134. In such embodiments, the camera can look at a pill from its origin and determine whether the correct pharmaceutical is being dispensed by comparing an image of the pharmaceutical to a stored image of the expected pharmaceutical. For example, the camera can compare a pill's color, contour, shape, size, and/or inscription to the color, contour, shape, size, and/or inscription of a known pill.
In the illustrated embodiment, the packaging equipment of each packaging unit 118 includes two feed stock rolls 166, 170 and a take-up roll 174. After the pharmaceuticals pass through the receptacle 158, the pharmaceuticals are sandwiched between two strips of material (e.g., plastic) from the feed stock rolls 166, 170. The strips of material are then heat sealed together to form a pouch for the pharmaceuticals. In some embodiments, such as the embodiment shown in
In some embodiments, the packaging units 118 may include equipment for packaging pharmaceuticals in a blister pack or card, rather than a pouch. Alternatively, the packaging units 118 may include equipment for packaging pharmaceuticals in a pharmacy vial. In such embodiments, the feed stock rolls 166, 170 and the take-up roll 174 may be removed and replaced with other suitable packaging equipment. Furthermore, the packaging system 110 may include a variety of different packaging units 118 to package the pharmaceuticals into a combination of pouches, blister cards, and/or pharmacy vials.
In some embodiments, each packaging unit 118 may include a printer to print a patient's name, the date, the amount and type of pharmaceuticals contained within, a bar code, and/or other indicia on the pouches as the pouches are formed. The printer may be, for example, a thermal printer. In other embodiments, the printer may include an ink ribbon or an inkjet. In addition, each packaging unit 118 may include a bar code scanner or vision system to monitor and check the pouches as they are spooled onto the take-up roll 174 or cut.
In some embodiments, the packaging units 118 may include rollers, castors, or other types of wheels. The wheels allow a user to roll the packaging units 118 toward and away from the storage unit 114 in a modular fashion. In the illustrated embodiment, the packaging units 118 can be easily connected to the storage unit 114 by aligning the motor bases 134 with designated areas of the frame 126. When the units 114, 118 are connected, a single control system can communicate with the storage unit 114 to control operation of the gantry assembly 130 and with the packaging units 118 to control operation of the packaging equipment. Such an arrangement allows the packaging units 118 to be quickly exchanged to package pharmaceuticals in different types and/or sizes of pouches or for maintenance.
The illustrated packaging system 110 includes a control system that functions in a similar manner to the control system 50 discussed above. A user can interact with the packaging system 110 through the control system to input patient information, facility information, and/or the pharmaceuticals needed. The control system can control movement of the gantry assembly 130 to move cassettes 122 from the shelves of the storage unit 114 to one of the motor bases 134. In addition, the control system can control operation of the motor bases 134 to selectively open and close the active cassettes 122A. Furthermore, the control system may optimize orders by minimizing movement of the gantry assembly 130 and cassettes 122 or by filling all the orders for a particular patient or facility consecutively.
As shown in
In other embodiments, a particular area (e.g., a portion of some rows and/or columns) within the storage unit 114 may be designated as the refill area. In such embodiments, the gantry assembly 130 may move empty cassettes 122 to this area for refilling by a user. When a filled cassette is placed in the refill area, a user may interact with the control system to notify the system 110 of the location of the filled cassette and the type/number of pharmaceuticals contained therein. The gantry assembly 130 may carry the cassette from the refill area to its proper location within the storage unit 114.
In some embodiments, one motor base 134, one chute 138, and one packaging unit 118 may operate together as a standalone packaging system. Such a system has a relatively small footprint for use in lower volume pharmacies or facilities. In these embodiments, a user may manually place and remove cassettes 122 on the motor base 134, as needed, to package pharmaceuticals using the packaging unit 118. In addition, the motor base 134 may be moved relatively lower and/or divided into multiple rows to facilitate access by a user.
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
In operation, the finger 258 is initially in the lowered position (
Various features and advantages of the invention are set forth in the following claims.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/836,629, filed Mar. 15, 2013, which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/654,365, filed Jun. 1, 2012, the entire contents of both of which are incorporated by reference herein.
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Child | 16544150 | US |