The pill pen of my design is a secure and convenient way to carry daily medications as well as a pleasant and constant reminder to take medications, as a patient just has to fasten the pill pen in the shirt pocket under his or her nose. It is perfectly suitable for those who are active and mobile and may not remember to take their medications on time.
The pill pen is composed of a cap and multiple cylindrical compartments, which are screwed together. It includes the first compartment which engages the cap with interlocking ridges, the last compartment which has a cutting blade and grinder, and the rest in the middle section, which are exchangeable in position. The cap has an interior concave surface for cutting and grinding a pill.
Everyone prefers to take medications which are identified. In contrast to placing labels on the surface of a container, I have designed a very user-friendly method to label a container from the inside. It is an elastic clip made from metal strip, metal wire or plastic, which presses the label against the interior wall of an compartment. The customer just makes a paper label for each medication and insert it between the clip and the interior wall of the compartment. The label with its information can be seen through the transparent wall.
Whenever a patient takes a pill from the pill pen, he or she is automatically reminded of the other pills to be taken and the schedules of taking them. Its compact size and flexibility make it a very convenient medication carrier and eliminates the clutter of medicine bottles.
The disadvantage of the available medication organizers is that all different medications are mixed together in one compartment without any label, which makes it impossible for anyone to identify each medication, even so for the patients themselves and the physicians.
When a patient develops low blood pressure due to anti-hypertensives or low blood sugar due to diabetic medication, he or she may not be aware of the culprit medications that should be adjusted or discontinued, because none of the medications is labeled in the medication organizer. The patient may continue to take the same concoction of unlabeled medications until more adverse outcome happens, such as fainting resulted from low blood pressure or low blood sugar.
Medication organizers typically have AM and PM partitions for medications. In fact, many medications need to be taken three times a day or even four times a day or taken only as needed at certain intervals (for example, every 4 to 6 hours as needed). Therefore, AM/PM partition is of little use and is actually problematic for such scheduling. Some medication organizers do have four partitions for the morning, noon, afternoon and bedtime dosing. However, only some of the medications need to be taken four times a day. Therefore, the space in such medication organizers is under-utilized. The four partitions for each day make the medication organizers bulky, too.
The designs of medication organizers limit the supply of medications to one week only, Monday through Sunday, while the space in each chamber is fixed, which could be either redundant or insufficient. On the contrary, the pill pen is flexible in that if one compartment is not sufficient to hold one week's supply of a particular medication due to its bigger size and the more frequency to be taken, another compartment can be used and then a label is inserted.
The pill pen with separate and labeled compartment for each kind of medication, ensures error-free administration of medications. Each compartment can be filled to the full capacity with medication, making efficient use of the space. Therefore, medication carrier like the pill pen is superior to the medication organizers.
It makes good economical sense and it is a very common practice for patients to obtain tablets in higher dosage and then take only half a tablet each time. Very often, the tablets of higher dosage may not cost much more than or even cost the same as the those of lower dosage.
Truly all-in-one, the self-contained pill cutter, pill grinder, cutting and grinding surface maximize the utility features that a pill container can possibly possess and meet all the special needs that may arise when a patient has to process his or her medications before taking them. The same is true for a caregiver who has to cut and grind medication for a patient in his or her care, who may be too sick to swallow a whole pill.
The pill cutter cuts a pill inside of the cap for the pen, so does the pill grinder. Hands are free from the pill when it is cut. Not even the smallest bit of a pill can be spilled when it is ground. The concave cutting surface inside of the cap ensures that any pill with a convex surface will be naturally centered. The interior wall of the cap along with the ridges guide and center the pill pen with the blade when cutting is performed. Therefore, it is a fool-proof, safe and accurate way to split a pill into equal halves.
Because of the very fact that many pills are made very tiny in size, it is considerably more accurate to split a very small pill with a blade on a handle under direct visualization as embodied in this design than with a hinged pill cutter while the small pill is out of sight when being cut. Sometimes, a pill needs to be cut into quarters, a task which has to be performed with a cutter similar to the one embodied by the pill pen.
The labeling method of my design can be automatically applied to any other kind of pill containers/organizers. Such design is significant in that it expands the functions of the conventional pill containers/organizers, so that they can be used as a weekly pill organizers as well as a container for multiple individual medications when labels are inserted. In the latter case, each compartment is filled up to make the full use of its space. If necessary, more than one compartment of the conventional pill container can be labeled and used for a single medication so as to provide such medication for a week or for a period as long as necessary. Therefore, the labeling method remedies the flaws associated with the pill organizers as mentioned above.
The pill pen is a composed of two or more cylindrical compartments which are screwed together sequentially by means of spiral threads on each compartment. Each compartment is intended to hold a single kind of medication of at least one-week's supply. More than one compartment can be labeled and used for an individual medication if more space is needed. A self-made label is attached to the interior wall of each compartment by virtue of an elastic clip and its content is visible through the container. Such labeling method can be applied to the regular pill organizers and confers them the dual functions both as a weekly pill organizer and as pill containers for multiple individual medications.
A cap is slipped onto the joined cylindrical compartments and is engaged to the first cylindrical compartment by means of ridges on the interior wall of the cap and on the exterior wall of the first compartment, which interlock.
The last cylindrical compartment has a blade embedded in its terminal segment. A cap is screwed on to the terminal segment of the last compartment as a safety cover for the sharp blade. This safety cap has a finely serrated surface on its vertex and functions as a pill grinder to crush a pill against the interior concave surface of the cap of the pill pen. The customers may choose not to use the compartment with a blade and screw the safety cap onto any other compartment.
In a simpler version, the pill pen has no grinder, because grinder is rarely used. Therefore, the safety cap for the blade has a flat end and the pill pen can stand on its end. The concave cutting surface in the cap remains the same.
The pill pen shown in
The cap 7 is engaged to the first compartment by means of ridges 6 on the interior wall of the cap and the ridges on the exterior wall of the first compartment, which interlock. The reason to use ridges instead of spiral threads to attach the cap to the pill pen is to avoid the possible jamming of the spiral threads which would cause considerable difficulty to extract the first compartment from inside of the cap 7. The cap has a metal clip 8 to fasten the pill pen to a desirable spot, such inside a shirt pocket or a carry bag.
The terminal segment of the last compartment with a embedded cutting blade 10 is covered with a safety cap 12 to prevent accidental injury by cutting. This terminal segment with the blade 10 is longer than the terminal segment of the other compartment and has more spiral threads 14, so that the safety cap 12 won't fall off easily to expose the blade. The safety cap 12, with spiral threads 14 inside of its opening, is screwed on to the terminal segment, which has both spiral threads 14 and a cutting blade 10. The safety cap 12 can be screwed on to any other compartment if a customer chooses not to use the one with a blade.
The safety cap 12 has a finely serrated surface 11 on its vertex, by virtue of which the safety cap also functions as a pill grinder to grind a pill 15 against the interior concave cutting and grinding surface 13 of the cap 7 of the pill pen.
As shown in
More than one compartments can be used to hold a single medication for one-week's supply if more space is needed. To easily identify each medication, a self-made label (not shown) is attached to the interior wall of each compartment with the use of a clip 1,2.
Such labeling method can be automatically applied to any other kind of pill containers/organizers and expands its functions. Besides its customary use as a weekly pill organizer, the labeling methods enable it to function as a container and carrier for multiple individual medications.
In addition to the slits of my design which function as a clamp for the label clip, a screw or rivet 17 can be used to fasten either version of label clips 1, 2 onto the cover of a pill box. As shown in
The pill pen is made from rigid, impermeable, semi-transparent or transparent material, such as plastic, so that the medications inside are visible. The surface may be decorated with relief-patterns to attenuate the spiral threads and division lines between the compartments and facilitate gripping.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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13329185 | Apr 2011 | US | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20120272528 A1 | Nov 2012 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61457594 | Apr 2011 | US |