This application is related to U.S. application titled, “METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR AUTOMATICALLY FILLING PRESCRIPTIONS USING INTERCHANGEABLE PLATENS,” which was filed on Jun. 27, 2008; Ser. No. 12/163,575; inventor Norman D. Knoth, currently pending. Additionally, this application is related to U.S. application titled, “PILL DISPENSER WITH INTERCHANGEABLE PLATEN HAVING ELECTRONICALLY READABLE IDENTIFICATION,” which was filed on Jun. 27, 2008; Ser. No. 12/163,615; inventor Norman D. Knoth, currently pending. Additionally, this application is related to U.S. application titled, “LOW-PROFILE X-Y TABLE,” which was filed on Jun. 27, 2008; Ser. No. 12/163,686; inventor Norman D. Knoth, currently pending.
This application is related to U.S. Pat. No. 7,225,597 titled “MACHINE TO AUTOMATE DISPENSING OF PILLS,” U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/317,538, titled “CASSETTE FOR DISPENSING PILLS,” and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/683,871, titled “METHOD OF DISPENSING PILLS FROM A MOVABLE PLATEN”, all of which are incorporated by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to the field of dispensing medicine and more particularly to an apparatus that automatically fills vials and blister packs with medicine in the form of pills, capsules, gel-caps and the like.
2. Description of the Related Art
The dispensing of medicine in the form of pills, capsules, gel-caps, and the like is performed in many ways and in many locations including pharmacies, packaging plants and hospitals. Pharmacies or drug stores employ Pharmacists to fill prescriptions with the prescribed amount of a prescribed medicine or dose. The Pharmacist fills the prescription from a bulk package of medicine into a delivery package sized for the consumer. Although Pharmacists are very careful to dispense the correct quantity of the correct medicine, ever too often, the wrong quantity is dispensed, or worse yet, the wrong medicine is dispensed.
The medicine is often delivered to the consumer in a package that is a container with a lid, for example, a vial or bottle. After counting the prescribed amount of medicine, the Pharmacist funnels the pills into the container, attaches the lid and places a label on the container indicating what medicine is stored inside and information related to the medicine. Again, the transfer of pills into the container creates another opportunity for one or more pills to be lost, thereby not providing the proper amount to the consumer.
With some consumers, it may be difficult to remember which pill to take, when to take it, and even whether they have already taken the pill. To overcome this problem, an array pack was devised with a series of compartment resembling cups or blisters, each “blister” containing one or more pills that are to be taken at the same time. This form of packaging is known as “blister packs,” “dose packs,” “bingo cards,” and “punch cards.” Often, cold medicine is supplied to consumers on such a card with a single dose in each blister and then the blister pack is packaged in a simple box with labels and advertising on the outside. Although a huge benefit to the consumer, filling the blister pack with a prescription involves the Pharmacist sitting down and laboriously dispensing the doses by hand into the individual blisters of the pack, then sealing the back. Furthermore, for prescriptions in which the dosage varies by day, extra attention to detail is required because each blister may have different quantities of pills or pills of a different strength or a combination of such, again feeding into the probability of error.
Presently, automation equipment is available for automatically filling prescriptions from a plurality of pill storage bins (or canisters). Each storage bin is filled with a supply of a given medicine in pill, capsule or gel-cap form. The storage bin has an electro-mechanical dispensing control and the dispensing control is controlled by a machine control that has, for example, a user interface for the Pharmacist to enter the medicine name, strength and quantity, thereby initiating the dispensing of that number of pills. The pills are then directed into a vial.
The art of filling containers with pills is quite old, going back to U.S. Pat. No. 2,457,220 to Fowler, et al issued Dec. 28, 1948; which is hereby incorporated by reference and describes a motorized pill dispensing machine. This machine has one storage area for a supply of pills that are thereafter handled by the machine in groups of a known quantity. As the machine rotates, the pills fall into receptacles numbering that known quantity, then as it further rotates, that number of pills falls through an opening, into a funnel and then into a pill container in the shape of a bottle or vial. This device is limited to dispensing a fixed quantity of a single type of pills into bottles.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,318,051 B1 to Preiss, issued Nov. 20, 2001; which is hereby incorporated by reference describes a device for dispatching singular items from a single supply station into product packs (blister packs) of the same type and is useful in an assembly line process of filling blister packs with a single medication. This device is limited to dispensing a single type of pill into a single type of blister pack. Likewise, U.S. Pat. No. 6,805,259 B2 to Stevens, et al, issued Oct. 19, 2004; hereby incorporated by reference, also describes a tablet dispenser that dispenses tablets from multiple reservoirs into blister packs. Although not limited to one medication as the previous patents, this device is limited to dispensing only into blister packs.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,925,774 B2 to Peterson, issued Aug. 9, 2005 is hereby incorporated by reference. It describes a machine a machine for filling blister package cavities. This device does not fill vials and to do so, a pharmacy would need to purchase a second machine.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,006,894 to de la Huerge, issued Feb. 28, 2006 is hereby incorporated by reference. This patent describes a device for filling a medication cassette which is then provided to a patient in a hospital setting. The disclosed device does not fill vials and/or blister packs from a plurality of canisters.
Unfortunately, the prior art does not provide for a dispensing device having multiple canisters in which each canister has a machine-readable identifier.
What is needed is a method and apparatus that will accurately fill a prescription from a plurality of canisters into a target package wherein each of the canisters has a machine-readable identifier for determining the contents of each canister.
An objective of the present invention is to provide an apparatus for dispensing pills, the apparatus having a plurality of canisters for containing pills.
Another objective of the present invention is to provide an apparatus for dispensing pills, the apparatus having a plurality of interchangeable canisters for containing pills and each canister having a machine-readable identifier.
In one embodiment, a device for dispensing pills is disclosed including a set of pill canisters, each having a machine-readable canister identifier. The device for dispensing pills includes a reader adapted to read the machine-readable canister identifier and a selector interfaced to the reader. An active pill canister from the plurality of pill canisters is selected by the selector using data from the reader to determine which of the plurality of pill canisters is at a target location. A control is provided for releasing a desired quantity of pills from a selected pill canister at a target location into a target package.
In another embodiment, a method for dispensing pills is disclosed including providing a device for dispensing pills having a set of pill canisters, each of the canisters having a machine-readable canister identifier. The device for dispensing pills includes a reader for reading the machine-readable canister identifier and a selector for selecting an active pill canister from the plurality of pill canisters. The selector is interfaced to the reader to read the canister identifier for determining which canister is at a target location (the selected canister). A control is provided for releasing a desired quantity of pills from a selected pill canister at a target location. The method continues with entering a request (e.g., the desired pill type and count) into the device for dispensing pills then, the selector uses the data from the reader to determine which of the plurality of pill canisters is at the target location; the selector moving the plurality of canisters until the active canister containing the desired pill type is over the target location. Next, a target package is selected and placed beneath the target location. Next, the device for dispensing pills dispenses the desired quantity of pills into the target package. Once finished, the target package is removed from the platen.
In another embodiment, a device for dispensing pills is disclosed including a set of pill canisters, each having a device for identifying each from another. The device for dispensing pills includes a way to read data contained within the device for identifying and a device for selecting an active pill canister from the plurality of pill canisters using data from the device for identifying to determine which of the plurality of pill canisters is at a target location. A mechanism releases a desired quantity of pills from a selected pill canister at the target location. The mechanism for dispensing pills includes a mechanism for holding the target package beneath the target location.
The invention can be best understood by those having ordinary skill in the art by reference to the following detailed description when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
Reference will now be made in detail to the presently preferred embodiments of the invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. Throughout the following detailed description, the same reference numerals refer to the same elements in all figures. Throughout the description (including the claims), the word “pill” is used generically. For the purpose of this application, the word pill is used to represent anything that can be dispensed by the device of the present invention and there is no limitation placed upon that which is dispensed. For example, tablets, capsules, caplets and gel-caps can be dispensed as well as coated candy (e.g., placebos). The present invention works well with most any solid object and can be scaled to work for much larger objects as well. Throughout the description (including the claims) the forms of packaging are referred to as vials or blister packs. For the purpose of this application, the word vial is used to represent any container having a single compartment for storing pills including, but not limited to, vials, bottles, tubes and the like. Often, these vials are configured to accept a lid that either snaps in place or screws in place. Blister packs refer to a class of packaging that has multiple compartments, wherein each compartment optionally (it is possible for some compartments to be empty) stores a dose of one or more pills, either the same pills or different pills. Other names for blister packs are, for example, dose packs, bingo cards and punch cards. The individual blisters of the blister pack can be arranged in any fashion, such as a linear series of blisters and a matrix of blisters and may be evenly spaced or not. Often, blister packs are sealed by a thin sheet that adheres to their open side, allowing one blister at a time to be pierced to gain access to the pills within that blister.
Throughout this description, the term canister refers to a dispenser or canister for a single pill type. The canister has a storage compartment for the pills and a mechanism for dispensing an accurate count of the pills. Canisters are sometimes referred to in the industry as cassettes or other names.
Referring to
Each dispensing station 20 is shown with a removable platen 40 installed into which a vial or blister pack is inserted for the automated dispensing of pills. Visible through a window are a plurality of pill canisters 30, each pill canister 30 containing a plurality of pills of a particular type. The pill canisters 30 are adapted to a carousel or other selection device (e.g., robotic arm, linear row of canisters, etc). In the shown embodiment, a number of canisters 30 are adapted to a carousel (not visible). Since there are multiple dispensing stations 20, each dispensing station has an indicator 22 and a lock 24. The lock 24 reduces the threat of unauthorized access to pills held in the canisters. The indicator 22 informs the operator which of the dispensing stations will be used to fill a prescription. As an example, the operator (e.g., pharmacist) enters the request (e.g., prescription information) at the control station 12 either by data entry or by scanning a bar code or similar identifier. Once the control station 12 determines which canister holds the pill type required for the prescription, the indicator 22 illuminates on the dispensing station 20 having the correct pill type telling the operator where to place the target package (e.g., blister pack or vial) for filling the prescription. In some embodiments, the dispensing stations 20 are supported by a cabinet 25 or other support structure as known in the industry.
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In some embodiment, the platen 40/44 have bottom arrangements and the platen 40/44 itself is adapted to receive and accept pills at the target location. In such, the platen 40/44 is filled with the desired pills, then the platen is removed from the pill dispensing station 20 and the pills are then transferred to a target container.
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In some embodiments, a canister identification 160 is present on the body of the canister (any convenient location on the canister). The identification 160 is electronically read by the dispensing station 20 to determine which pill type is loaded in individual locations about the dispensing station (e.g., different locations on the carousel). In some embodiments, the identification 160 is a bar code or other optically readable media. In such, an optical reader 162 is used by the dispensing station to read the bar code 160 and determine the pill type contained in the canister 100. The optical reader 162 is connected to the dispensing station 20 by wires 164. In some embodiments, the identification is a RFID tag (radio frequency identification tag) 160 and the RFID tag 160 is read by a RFID reader/writer 162. The RFID reader 162 is connected to the dispensing station 20 by wires 164. In some embodiments having a RFID identification device 160, the RFID tag 160 is read-only. In other embodiments having a RFID identification device 160, the RFID tag 160 has some read-only data and some read/write data. The read/write data is used for various features/functions such as writing a pill count to the RFID identification 160 before removing the canister 100 from the dispensing station 20. In this way, an initial pill count is written to the RFID identification 160 when the canister 20 is initially filled, then when pills are dispensed, the count is decremented such that the RFID identification 160 always contains an accurate count of the pill count within the canister 100. This is useful when there are more pill types than positions in the dispensing stations 20 and certain canisters 20 with certain pill types are swapped between the dispensing station 20 and a storage location (not shown).
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For completeness, a canister drive motor 102 is shown. The internal operation of the canister 20 is shown, for example, in the cited references as well as other such devices are known in the industry.
Referring to
Also, in this example, each canister has a canister identification device 160 and the dispensing machine has a reader 162 for reading the canister identification device 160 and determining which canister 100 is in each possible position. In some embodiments, the canister identification device 160 is a bar code and the reader 162 is a bar code reader. In some embodiments, the canister identification device 160 is an RFID and the reader 162 is a RFID reader.
In some embodiments, the canister identification device 160 is an RFID with writable storage and the reader 162 is an RFID reader/writer. In such embodiments, various data is written to the RFID by the dispensing station 20. For example, a quantity field within the read/write data area of the RFID is reserved for a quantity of pills present in the canister 107. When the canister 107 is filled at a filling station, the quantity field in the RFID 160 is set to the number of pills in the canister 107. During dispensing, the quantity of pills in the canister 107 is read from the quantity field of the RFID 160 to determine if sufficient pills are present in the canister 107. After dispensing a quantity of pills, the new quantity of pills present in the canister 107 is written back to the RFID 160 so that, if the canister is moved, etc., the RFID 160 will contain an accurate count of pills within the canister 107.
Referring to
The X-Y positioning table 200 has two positioning drive motors or servo motors 218/238 (see
The X-plane linear gear 212 is affixed to an X-plane truck 216. Movement of the X-plane truck 216 in response to rotation of the X-plane linear gear 212 results in movement of the frame 250 in the X direction. The X-plane truck 216 has bearings 217 that travel within an X-truck trough 252 of the frame 250. Likewise, the Y-plane linear gear 232 is affixed to a Y-plane truck 218. Movement of the Y-plane truck 218 in response to rotation of the Y-plane linear gear 232 results in movement of the frame 250 in the Y direction. The Y-plane truck 218 has bearings 219 that travel within a Y-truck trough 254 of a frame 250. In this way, as the X-plane linear gear 212 moves in the X direction, the Y-plane truck 218 travels within the Y-truck trough 254. As the Y-plane linear gear 232 moves the frame 250 in the Y direction, the X-plane truck 216 travels within the X-truck trough 252. In this way, the frame 250 moves in both the X direction and the Y direction with respect to the base table 202 responsive to rotation of the X drive gear and rotation of the Y drive gear. Since there is no required overlap of the X-drive and Y-drive mechanisms, the X-Y table of the present invention requires less z-axis thickness.
In some embodiments, each platen [41] includes a platen identification 60. In some embodiments, the platen identification 60 is a bar code. In some embodiments, the platen identification 60 is an RFID. In some embodiments, the platen identification 60 has writable data storage such as a writeable RFID. In other embodiments, the platen identification 60 is any known identification device known in the industry. A platen identification reader 165 for reading the platen identification 60 (e.g., a bar code reader or an RFID reader) is provided within the dispensing station 20. In some embodiments in which the platen identification 60 has writable data storage (e.g., writeable RFID), the platen identification reader 165 is adapted to write data to the platen identification 60.
In embodiments in which the platen identification 60 has writable data storage (e.g., writeable RFID); information is written to the platen identification 60 and read/used at a later time. For example, the request (e.g., pill type, pill quantity, distribution in blister pack, etc.) is written to the platen identification 60 externally to the dispensing station 20 then when the platen [41] is inserted into the dispensing station 20, the request is read from the platen identification 60. In some embodiments, after filling the request, the request is then overwritten or cleared by the dispensing station 20 so the same request is not later duplicated.
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Platen identification information from the platen identifier 60 is read by the platen identifier reader 165 and the platen identification information is provided to the main program 400 running on the controller 500 (see
Referring to
The controller 500 displays information, alerts, prompts, etc., on a display 560. In some embodiments, the display 560 is a graphics display. In some embodiments, the display 560 is a LCD display. In other embodiments, the display is a numeric display, alpha-numeric display, set of lights or any combination thereof. Operation of the system is initiated by control inputs 570. In some embodiments, the control inputs 570 include a keyboard. In other embodiments, the control 570 includes push buttons, switches, potentiometers and digital potentiometers, etc.
The processor 510 reads the platen identification 60 through a platen reader input port 540 as known in the industry. The canister identification 160 is read/written by the processor 510 through a canister identification I/O port 550.
The X-Y motors 218/238 of the X-Y table 200 are controlled by an X/Y I/O port 580 and the carousel rotation motor 584 (or other selection mechanism motor control) is controlled by the carousel I/O port 582. The carousel dispensing motor 102 is controlled by a pill drive I/O port 586. In some embodiments (not shown) a pill drop sensor is connected to the processor 510 for counting the number of pills dropped at the target location.
Referring to
The method begins with loading 600 a plurality of canisters 100 onto the carousel 105 (or other canister selecting mechanism as previously described). Next, the desired target package (e.g., a specific blister pack or a vial) is loaded 602 into a platen configured to hold and support that type of package and the platen with the target package is loaded 604 into the frame 250 of the pill dispensing station 20 and the platen identification 60 is read 606 to determine which platen was loaded. Responsive to the platen identification 60, software specific to filling that platen is loaded/run 608. Next, the request (e.g., type of pill, quantity of pills and distribution within the individual blisters) is entered 610 (or prescription scanned at the dispensing station scanner 18). The canister 107 having the desired pill type is selected and placed over the target location 612. In some embodiments, the canister identification 160 is read to assure/determine the proper canister 107 is located over the target location. In some embodiments, the current quantity of pills present in the canister 107 is read 614 from the canister identification 160 to assure a sufficient number of pills are available in the canister 107. The desired pills are dispensed into the target location 616, moving the X-Y table as per the software 402 specific to the particular platen to fill individual blisters as needed. In embodiments in which the canister identification 160 is writeable, an updated quantity of pills contained within the canister 107 is written 616 to the canister identification 160.
Equivalent elements can be substituted for the ones set forth above such that they perform in substantially the same manner in substantially the same way for achieving substantially the same result.
It is believed that the system and method of the present invention and many of its attendant advantages will be understood by the foregoing description. It is also believed that it will be apparent that various changes may be made in the form, construction and arrangement of the components thereof without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention or without sacrificing all of its material advantages. The form herein before described being merely exemplary and explanatory embodiment thereof. It is the intention of the following claims to encompass and include such changes.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2457220 | Fowler et al. | Dec 1948 | A |
3871156 | Koenig et al. | Mar 1975 | A |
6318051 | Preiss | Nov 2001 | B1 |
6497342 | Zhang et al. | Dec 2002 | B2 |
6805259 | Stevens et al. | Oct 2004 | B2 |
6925774 | Peterson | Aug 2005 | B2 |
7006894 | de la Huerga | Feb 2006 | B2 |
7225597 | Knoth | Jun 2007 | B1 |
7805217 | Chudy et al. | Sep 2010 | B2 |
20070145066 | Knoth et al. | Jun 2007 | A1 |
20070157548 | Knoth | Jul 2007 | A1 |
20080051937 | Khan et al. | Feb 2008 | A1 |
20080134637 | Boyer | Jun 2008 | A1 |
20090188937 | Kim | Jul 2009 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20090321470 A1 | Dec 2009 | US |