The invention relates to a device for inhibiting the removal of an article from a blister package-type container and, more particularly, to a child-resistant device for inhibiting removal of an article from a blister package, in which the device's ability to inhibit removal can be deactivated.
Each year, thousands of children are injured by ingesting articles such as pharmaceutical products. For example, pills, tablets, and capsules of pharmaceutical products are often shaped, sized, and colored for the convenience of adults, yet represent an attractive hazard to young children unaware of the danger of ingesting such products. Young children may also be injured by playing with other pharmaceutical products, such as syringes.
Many pharmaceutical products, such as pills, tablets, capsules and syringes and other such articles, are packaged in so-called blister-type packages or containers to facilitate removal but to inhibit contamination and product tampering. With such packages or containers, the article is typically sandwiched between a layer of transparent or translucent plastic in the form of an outward extension, cavity or blister, and a rupturable or puncturable layer. Force applied to the blister is transmitted to the article, which ruptures or punctures the puncturable layer for removal of the article by the user.
To comply with government regulations that require child-resistant caps on bottles and vials of many pharmaceuticals, there has been developed at least one device which inhibits the removal by children of articles such as pills, syringes, etc., from blister-type containers, disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,150,793 and 5,244,091 (Tannenbaum), the entire contents of which are incorporated by reference herein. However, some users of child-resistant packaging may lack the manual dexterity to open and close the package, leading to annoyance and frustration. In particular, in the case where the packaging is used for dispensing pharmaceutical products, such as medication, adult users who do not have children in their household may prefer to use packaging that is not child-resistant. Often such users will request non-child-resistant packaging to avoid such difficulties. While such a request may be accommodated by the pharmacist dispensing drugs in non-child-resistant packaging at the point of sale, it is often not easy to repackage blister-packaged drugs which come in standard sized dosage formats. The user can choose to accept the child-resistant package from the pharmacist or have the contents of the blister container transferred to another container that does not have the feature of being child-resistant. Another solution to the problem would be for a manufacturer or supplier to produce or sell two differently packaged products. Such product differentiation, however, involves higher cost and difficulty of meeting demand for the product based solely on packaging preference.
Briefly stated, the present invention comprises an improvement for a device that inhibits removal of an article from a blister-type container in order to protect a child from the package contents, but which has means to bypass the child-resistant feature. In particular, a lock is provided which locks open access to remove articles which are contained in the blister package.
According to one aspect of invention, there is provided a locking apparatus for a device housing a container that contains articles. The inhibiting device includes a layer movable between two positions with respect to at least a portion of the container. The layer is configured to at least partially inhibit removal of articles from the container when in one position and to permit removal of articles when in the other position. When moved into the former position, thus, the layer serves as a blocking element to interfere with the easy removal of the articles from the container. The locking apparatus also has a lock that can be operated to lock the layer in the latter position, where removal of the articles from the container is permitted, and to prevent movement of the layer to the other position, where removal of the articles is inhibited.
Another aspect of the invention is a device that includes a container, a layer like that just mentioned, retaining means, biasing means, and a housing. The container may be a blister container, such as is well-known in the art and is specifically described in the above-mentioned Tannenbaum patents, but one of skill in the art will recognize that the device described above may include other types of containers. The container (if it is a blister container) include a first generally flat sheet having at least one cavity or blister formed therein for accommodating an article. The container also comprises a puncturable and generally flat second sheet having a first side that faces one side of the first sheet. The article can be removed from the container by applying pressure to the exterior surface of the blister to force the article against and through the second sheet.
The device comprises a layer moveable with respect to the container between a first position and a second position. The layer is between the first and second sheets, and has at least one opening that is substantially aligned with the blister when the housing is in the first position, and that is of such a size as will permit passage of the article therethrough.
The device also includes biasing means, arranged to bias the layer into the second position, where the opening in the layer is no longer aligned with the blister, and thus inhibits removal of the article from the container. The layer is arranged so that it can be moved against the bias of the biasing means into the first position, bringing the blister substantially into alignment with the layer opening to permit removal of the article as mentioned above.
The device also includes retaining means, operable when the layer is in the first position, for retaining the layer in the first position. In addition the device can include a housing surrounding at least a portion of the container and in communication with the biasing means.
The foregoing summary, as well as the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment of the invention, will be better understood when read in conjunction with the appended drawings. For the purpose of illustrating the invention, there is shown in the drawings an embodiment which is presently preferred, it being understood, however, that the invention is not limited to the specific instrumentalities disclosed. In the drawings:
Certain terminology is used in the following description for convenience only and is not limiting. In particular, the words “outwardly”, “right” and “left” designate directions in the drawing to which reference is made.
To prevent inadvertent or otherwise undesired dispensing of articles from the device 10, a layer 32 is provided in the device 10, as shown in
To move the layer 32 between these two positions the layer is provided with a trigger 11. When the layer is in the position shown in
In the preferred embodiment, the layer 32 is biased into the second position (that shown in
For users suffering from reduced coordination, or arthritis, however, this may not be practical, or may be painful. Accordingly, the preferred embodiment is provided with a tab 42 on the layer 32 so as to be revealed extending into the window 36 from the left when the trigger 11 is pressed to the right. The tab 42 is coplanar with the layer 32. In order to retain the trigger 11 and the layer 32 in the first (open) position the user can bend or fold the tab 42 out of the plane of the layer 32 and into the window 36, as is shown in
As shown in
The disabling tab 50 and the retaining tab 54 are formed of a material that permits them to be flexed about the axis 52.
As can be seen from
In this embodiment, as can be seen, the lock (formed of the tab 42) is itself formed as a part of layer 32, and in fact, those elements as well as the resilient portions 44 and 46, and the surrounding frame or base are all formed from a single piece of material, for example by stamping. The layer 32, retaining means 42, and biasing means 44, 46 are preferably made from a flexible plastic material, such as polyvinyl chloride or polypropylene. Moreover, the layer 32 and biasing means 44, 46 can be integrally formed, from the same or different materials, or can be separate elements. However, one of skill in the art will appreciate that those components may also be formed from other suitable materials, all of which are within the scope of the present invention.
While the layer 32 is in this embodiment configured to slide relative to container 14, it is within the broad scope of the invention to make the layer 32 translationally or rotationally movable with respect to the container 14.
The article 12 is typically a pill, tablet, capsule, or a syringe or the like, although one of ordinary skill in the art will understand that the article 12 may be any article or product that it is convenient to package in a blister-type package or container 14. One of ordinary skill in the art will also understand that the article 12 need not be restricted to pharmaceutical articles, but may be any article, such as a screw, nut, bolt, razor blade, etc.
Preferably, the blister-type container 14 comprises a conventional blister package, best shown by the cross-sectional view in
In the preferred embodiment, the container 14 comprises a first generally flat sheet 16. The first sheet 16 is formed from a generally compressible, formable material which would allow pressure applied to the first sheet 16 to be transmitted to the article 12 to remove the article 12 from the container 14.
The first sheet 16 is preferably formed from a formable polymeric material, such as one selected from the group consisting of polyvinyl chloride, styrene, polypropylene, barrex, aclar, PET, PETG, and APET including laminations or co-extrusions thereof in accordance with the chemical and/or mechanical characteristics of the article 12 and which may be formed to accommodate the size and shape of the article 12. One of ordinary skill in the art will understand, however, that the first sheet 16 may be formed from any other generally compressible, formable material such as aluminum.
The first sheet 16 has a first side 18 and a second side 20. The first sheet 16 also has at least one and typically several generally outwardly extending blisters 22 for accommodating the articles 12. The interior dimensions of the blisters 22 preferably conform to the size and shape of the article 12. One of ordinary skill in the art will understand that the first sheet 16 need not be flat, and may have blisters 22 of any size and shape in keeping with the spirit and scope of the present invention.
The container 14 includes a rupturable or puncturable generally flat second sheet 24. The second sheet 24 is preferably generally rupturable by the article 12 in the area of the blister 22 when force is applied to a blister 22 of the first sheet 16 and thereby to the article 12. The force may be generated by the pressure of one or more fingers of an individual, for example.
Preferably, the second sheet 24 is a metallic foil, such as aluminum foil. However, one of ordinary skill in the art would understand that any other rupturable or puncturable material, such as a plastic material of the type described above in connection with the first sheet 16 or a paper material, may be used for the second sheet 24.
One of ordinary skill in the art will understand that the second sheet 24 need not be generally flat, but may have ridges or indentations, etc. Preferably, the second sheet 24 generally conforms in size to the first sheet 16, but one of ordinary skill in the art would understand that the second sheet 24 may be larger or smaller than the first sheet 16, as desired.
The second sheet 24 has a first side 26 and a second side 28. The first side 26 of the second sheet 24 sealingly engages a portion 30 of the first side 18 of the first sheet 16. The portion 30 generally does not include the area of the blisters 22. Preferably, the first side 26 of the second sheet 24 is heat sealed or adhesively engaged to the portion 30 of the first sheet 16. For purposes of clarity in the drawing, the adhesive or heat seal coating is not shown. One of ordinary skill in the art will understand that the first side 26 of the second sheet 24 may be engaged with the portion 30 of the first sheet 16 by some other means.
The blister package or container 14 as described above is a typical blister package well known to those skilled in the art. An article 12 may be removed from the container 14 by applying pressure to an outside surface 23 of a blister 22 to force the article 12 to rupture or puncture the second sheet 24. One of ordinary skill in the art will understand that the pressure necessary to puncture the second sheet 24 with the article 12 is, among other criteria, a function of the shape and compressibility of the article 12, as well as the compressibility, thickness and type of material from which the first sheet 16 and second sheet 24 are formed. The pressure is generally that which is capable of being generated by one or more fingers of an individual.
In another alternative structure, the finger hole 38 may be replaced with a gripping surface (not shown) or gripping tab exposed through the window 36 so that the exposed portion 40 of the layer 32 positioned within in the window 36 can be manipulated or moved with at least one finger positioned at least within the interior 68 of the housing 34 and within the window 36. The gripping surface or tab may be configured to at least partially fill the area defined by the window 36, and may be at least partially solid (i.e., free of apertures). The gripping surface or gripping tab may be configured with a texture suitable to be engaged or manipulated by a finger of a user of the device 10. Such an exposed gripping surface within the window 36 can be coplanar with the surrounding portions of the layer 32, or may be a raised or indented surface (e.g., a detent or indent), or have another configuration to facilitate gripping with a finger. Moreover, such a gripping surface or gripping tab may be completely contained within the interior 68 of the housing 68, or may protrude outwardly through the window 38 from within the interior 68 of the housing 34 such that the user can grip the surface of the tab without passing a finger through the window 36.
The housing 34 shown in
The biasing means 44, 46 shown in
The locking tab 42 is shown in
In order to prevent an undesired return of the layer 32 from the first position to the second position, the tab 42 can be used to lock the layer 32 into the first position. Thus the locking apparatus of the invention assists a user who does not need or wish to use a self-closing, or other similar child-resistant feature, of the device 10. By virtue of the locking tab 42, the layer 32 can be retained in the first position to disable any return (automatic or otherwise) of the layer 32 to the second position, unless and until the tab 42 is manually moved to the unlocking position.
The layer 32 can be returned to the second position by deflecting the disabling tab 50 back toward the layer 32. In addition, the layer 32 may be configured to require a user to move the layer 32, through pulling on the disabling tab 50, a further predetermined amount in the direction shown of the arrows in
It is to be understood that the locking apparatus is not limited to the embodiment described above, and one of skill in the art will recognize that the retaining tab 50 and the disabling tab 54 may be replaced with other structures within the scope of the invention. For example, the disabling tab 50 and retaining tab 54 may be replaced with one or more snap closures so as to connect a portion of the layer 32 to a portion of the container 14 to inhibit any relative movement between them when the layer 32 is in the first position. Such snap closure can be performed while the layer 32 is in the first position, for example, by applying pressure through the exterior of the housing 34 at a location corresponding to the location of the snap closure within the housing 34.
It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that changes can be made to the embodiments described herein without departing from the broad inventive concept thereof. It is understood, therefore, that this invention is not limited to the particular embodiments disclosed, but is intended to cover all modifications which are within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.