The present invention relates to an automatic packager for medications. More particularly, the present invention relates to a feed mechanism for providing medications to an automatic packager.
One embodiment provides a cartridge for an automatic packager including a reservoir for storing a plurality of medications and a wheel including a bottom portion placed in the reservoir. The wheel is rotatable with respect to the reservoir. The cartridge also includes a scooping member provided on the wheel to rotate with the wheel and singulate a medication from the reservoir.
Another embodiment provides a cartridge mechanism for an automatic packager including a platform configured to receive a medication from a cartridge and a camera system. The cartridge mechanism also includes an electronic processor coupled to the camera system. The electronic processor is configured to control the camera system to capture an image of the platform and determine whether an expected medication was delivered to the platform based on the image. The electronic processor is also configured to dispense the medication from the cartridge in response to determining that the expected medication is delivered to the platform. The electronic processor is further configured to return the medication to the cartridge in response to determining that the expected medication is not delivered to the platform.
Another embodiment provides a method of dispensing medications from a cartridge using a cartridge mechanism. The method includes delivering a medication to a platform of the cartridge mechanism and controlling, using the electronic processor, a camera system to capture an image of the platform. The method also includes determining, using the electronic processor, whether an expected medication was delivered to the platform based on the image. The method includes dispensing the medication from the cartridge in response to determining that the expected medication is delivered to the platform and returning the medication to the cartridge in response to determining that the expected medication is not delivered to the platform.
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.
Pharmacies use several types of packaging to provide pharmaceutical products or medications to consumers. The types of packaging may include strip packages, blister cards, and the like. Most pharmacies use automatic packagers in order to package medications into strip packages or blister cards and to provide instructions on these packages. In some embodiments, blister cards may also be packaged by hand by a pharmacist or pharmacy technician. The automatic packagers allow the pharmacies to serve a large number of customers by packaging the medications efficiently. The automatic packagers include a motor base to receive one or more cassettes. Each cassette stores one particular kind or size of medication and is operated by the motor base to dispense the medications one by one into the packager.
Due to the mechanism involved in individually dispensing medications from the cassettes, the cassettes are expensive, store a limited amount of medications, and take a lot of space. Pharmacies may have to maintain a large number of cassettes to service the patients, which compounds the cost. Cassettes also lack verification systems to verify that medications are properly being dispensed from the cassettes.
In order to reduce the cost to the pharmacies, independent embodiments of the present invention provide a universal feed mechanism for packagers that allow pharmacies to use inexpensive universal bulk canisters to store and to dispense different types (e.g., shapes, sizes, etc.) of medications to the packagers. The universal canisters have a high capacity to store several hundreds of medications. As referred to here, medications may include pills, capsules, tablets, and the like.
The packaging unit 110 receives the individual pills and packages them into a blister card or pouch packages to be provided to the consumer. In the example illustrated in
In the example illustrated in
Referring to
As shown in
The wheel 130 is provided inside the cartridge 115 and includes a bottom portion that is placed in the reservoir 125. The wheel 130 is driven by a motor assembly 145 provided at the top of the cartridge 115. Particularly, the wheel 130 includes teeth that interlock with the motor assembly 145 and the motor assembly 145 rotates the wheel 130 using the interlocking teeth of the wheel and the motor assembly 145. Referring to
Referring to
Each cartridge 115 may include a scooping disc 150 having differently sized inward projections 155 and pockets 160. This allows the different cartridges 115 to be used for different sizes or types of medications 180. The scooping disc 150 may also be detachable such that a pharmacist may change the scooping disc based on the size or type of the medication being dispensed from the cartridge 115.
The medications 180 are individually delivered to the shuttle system 140 when the pockets 160 and the puckered projections 155 pass by the shuttle system 140. The camera system 135 may be used to verify that an expected medication 180 (for example, only a single, whole (or unbroken) medication 180) is delivered to the shuttle system 140. The illustrated camera system 135 includes a mirror 185 placed over the shuttle system 140 and a camera 190 placed on top of the spout 120. The mirror 185 is slanted such that the camera 190 may acquire an image of the contents of the shuttle system 140. The camera system 135 may additionally include a lighting system (e.g., an LED lighting system) to illuminate the contents of the shuttle system 140 when the camera 190 is capturing an image.
The shuttle system 140 includes a platform 195, a shuttle 200, and a shuttle drive 210. Referring to
The shuttle 200 may be moved between the base portion 215, the first opening 220, and the second opening 230. The shuttle 200 transfers the medications from the base portion 215 either to the reservoir 125 through the first opening 220 or to the dispensing opening 205 through the second opening 230. The shuttle 200 is driven by a shuttle drive 210. The shuttle drive 210 may be a motor assembly, an actuator, or the like that moves the shuttle 200 between the base portion 215, the first opening 220 (e.g., a first position), and the second opening 230 (e.g., a second position).
Referring back to
The universal feed cassette 105 may also include an indicator system 250 (see
In some embodiments, the electronic processor 305 is implemented as a microprocessor with separate memory, such as the memory 310. In other embodiments, the electronic processor 305 may be implemented as a microcontroller (with memory 310 on the same chip). In other embodiments, the electronic processor 305 may be implemented using multiple processors. In addition, the electronic processor 305 may be implemented partially or entirely as, for example, a field-programmable gate array (FPGA), an applications specific integrated circuit (ASIC), and the like, and the memory 310 may not be needed or be modified accordingly. In the example illustrated, the memory 310 includes non-transitory, computer-readable memory that stores instructions that are received and executed by the electronic processor 305 to carry out the functionality of the cartridge 115 described herein. The memory 310 may include, for example, a program storage area and a data storage area. The program storage area and the data storage area may include combinations of different types of memory, such as read-only memory and random-access memory.
The transceiver 315 enables wired or wireless communication between the electronic processor 305 and the control system of the automatic packager 100. In some embodiments, rather than a transceiver 315 the cartridge 115 may include separate transmitting and receiving components, for example, a transmitter and a receiver.
The camera system 135 receives control signals from the electronic processor 305. Based on the control signals received from the electronic processor 305, the camera system 135 controls the camera 190 and the indicator system 250 that illuminates the platform 195. The motor assembly 145 may send position sensor 175 signals to the electronic processor 305 and receive control signals to operate a motor of the motor assembly 145 based on the position sensor signals. As described above, the shuttle drive 210 may be a motor assembly or an actuator. The shuttle drive 210 may also additionally include a position sensor to determine the position of the shuttle 200. The shuttle drive 210 may send the position sensor signals to the electronic processor 305, which sends control signals to the shuttle drive 210 to move the shuttle 200 based on the position sensor signals. In some embodiments, the shuttle system 140 may also include a shuttle home sensor, which indicates whether the shuttle 200 is at a home position. Signals from the shuttle home sensor are provided to the electronic processor 305 to control the movement of the shuttle 200.
The pill sensor 240 communicates with the electronic processor 305 to provide an indication of whether or not a pill is dispensed through the conduit 235. The electronic processor 305 also controls the indicator system 250 to provide an indication of the status of each cartridge 115. The cartridge 115 may also include additional electronics 325 such as a cartridge sensor and a solenoid lock. The cartridge sensor determines whether the cartridge 115 is in a correct position in the universal feed cassette 105 and whether the cartridge 115 is installed properly. The solenoid lock keeps the cartridge 115 in position during a dispensing process to inhibit other medications (e.g., of a different kind than the ones being dispensed by the cartridge 115) from being added to the cartridge 115.
The automatic packager 100 may pack only a single medication of a kind in any one package. Accordingly, the cartridge 115 may need to verify that an expected medication 180 (for example, a single unbroken medication 180) is dispensed to the packaging unit 110. The method 400 further includes determining whether only a single unbroken medication 180 is delivered to the shuttle system 140 (at block 410). This may also be referred to as singulation verification. The electronic processor 305 controls the camera system 135 to acquire an image of contents of the base portion 215. The mirror 185 reflects the contents of base portion 215 to the camera 190, which captures the image. The camera 190 provides the captured image to the electronic processor 305 for verification. The electronic processor 305 may use image recognition techniques on the captured image to ensure that only a single unbroken medication 180 is delivered to the shuttle system. Example image recognition techniques are described in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2018/0091745, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
When the electronic processor 305 determines that more than one medication 180 has been delivered to the shuttle system 140 or that a broken medication 180 has been delivered to the shuttle system 140, the method 400 includes returning the contents of the shuttle system 140 to the reservoir 125 (at block 415). The electronic processor 305 controls the shuttle drive 210 to move the shuttle 200 from the base portion 215 to the first opening 220 (e.g., the first position). The shuttle 200 returns the contents from the base portion 215 to the reservoir 125 through the first opening 220. The method 400 returns to block 405 to deliver the next medication 180 to the shuttle system 140.
When the electronic processor 305 determines that only one unbroken medication 180 has been delivered to the shuttle system 140, the method 400 includes determining whether the correct medication 180 is delivered to the shuttle system 140 (at block 420). As described above, the electronic processor 305 may use the above incorporated image recognition techniques to determine whether the correct type of medication 180 has been delivered to the shuttle system 140.
When the electronic processor 305 determines that the incorrect type of medication 180 is delivered to the shuttle system 140, the method 400 moves to block 415 to return the contents of the shuttle system 140 to the reservoir 125, as described above. Accordingly, in blocks 410 and 420, the method 400 is determining whether an expected medication 180 is delivered to the shuttle system 140. In some embodiments, determining whether an expected medication 180 is delivered may include only one of the blocks 410 or 420 or the blocks 410 and 420 may be performed in a different order. In other embodiments, rather than checking for whether a single unbroken medication 180 is delivered to the shuttle system 140, determining whether an expected medication 180 may include determining whether a correct type of medication is delivered to the shuttle system 140 regardless of the number of medications delivered to the shuttle system 140. In yet other embodiments, determining whether an expected medication 180 may include determining whether a correct number of medications is delivered to the shuttle system 140.
When the electronic processor 305 determines that the correct type of medication 180 is delivered to the shuttle system 140, the method 400 includes delivering the medication 180 to the packaging unit 110 (at block 425). The electronic processor 305 controls the shuttle drive 210 to move the shuttle 200 from the base portion 215 to the second opening 230 (e.g., the second position). The shuttle 200 delivers the medication 180 from the base portion 215 to the packaging unit 110 through the second opening 230, the conduit 235, and the dispensing opening 205.
The method 400 also includes verifying the delivery of the medication 180 to the packaging unit 110 (at block 430). The pill sensor 240 detects whether or not a pill was dispensed through the conduit 235 and provides indicating signals to the electronic processor 305. When the electronic processor 305 determines that a medication 180 was delivered to the packaging unit 110, the method returns to block 405 to deliver the next medication. When the electronic processor 305 determines that a medication 180 was not delivered to the packaging unit 110, the electronic processor 305 sends an interrupt to the control system of the automatic packager 100 and returns to block 405 to re-deliver the medication 180.
In the example illustrated in
Referring to
The cartridges 515 are removable fixed to the universal feed cassette 505. A pharmacist or technician may remove each individual cartridge 515 from the cartridge slot 520 to fill the cartridge 515 with medications from a bulk canister. The cartridge 515 can then be placed into any of the cartridge slot 520.
Referring to
Referring to
The wheel 545 is provided inside the cartridge 515 and includes a bottom portion that is placed in the reservoir 540. The wheel 545 is driven by a motor assembly 560 provided at the top of the cartridge assembly 530. Particularly, the wheel 545 includes teeth that interlock with the motor assembly 560 and the motor assembly 560 rotates the wheel 545 using the interlocking teeth of the wheel 545 and the motor assembly 560. As described above, a position sensor assembly may be used to determine the position and/or speed of the wheel 545 to control the rotation of the wheel 545.
Referring to
During rotation of the wheel 545 and the scooping disc 565, when the inward projections 570 encounter the reservoir 540 and a plurality of medications 180 in the reservoir 540, the medications 180 move inward into the inward projections 570. The holding pin 575 is retracted when the inward projection 570 is moving along the reservoir 540 at a downward position of the wheel 545. As the inward projection 570 moves out of the reservoir 540, the holding pin 575 is advanced towards the circumferential end of the inward projection 570 to engage a medication 180. As a consequence as shown in
When the first arm 600 is engaged by the arc portion 592 of the cam 590, the first arm 600 is pushed towards the circumference of the wheel 545. As a consequence, due to the pivoting action of the center portion 610, the second arm 605 is retracted towards the center of the wheel 545, thereby retracting the holding pin 575. When the first arm 600 is engaged by the cut-off portion 594 of the cam 590, the first arm 600 moves towards the center of the when 545. As a consequence, due to the pivoting action of the center portion 610, the second arm 605 is advanced towards the circumference of the wheel 545 thereby advancing the holding pin 575 into the inward projection 570. The cam 590 is fixed such that the holding pin 575 is retracted when the inward projection 570 is dropping a medication 180 into the shuttle system 555 and when the inward projection 570 is within the reservoir. Additionally, the cam 590 is fixed such that the holding pin 575 is advanced when the inward projection 570 exits the reservoir 540.
Referring to
The shuttle system 555 includes a platform 625, a shuttle 630, and a shuttle drive 635. The platform 625 may be made from a clear or translucent plastic material. An LED lighting system, as described above, may be provided over and/or under the platform 625 to illuminate the contents on the platform 625 when the camera system 550 is capturing an image of the contents. The LED lighting system may emit visible or infrared light to illuminate the platform 625 for the camera 620.
The shuttle 630 may be moved between the platform 625, over the reservoir 540, and over a conduit 640 (shown in
The conduit 640 is similar to the conduit 235 described above. Additionally, the universal feed cassette 505 and the cartridge assembly 530 may include components similar to the universal feed cassette 105 and the cartridge 115 as described above.
In some embodiments, the electronic processor 705, the memory 710, and the transceiver 715 are implemented similar to the electronic processor 305, the memory 310, and the transceiver 315. In some embodiments, the universal feed cassette 505 or the automatic packager may include a single electronic processor 705, a single memory 710, and a single transceiver 715 that control all the cartridge assemblies 530.
The camera system 550 receives control signals from the electronic processor 705. Based on the control signals received from the electronic processor 705, the camera system 550 controls the camera 620 and the lighting system that illuminates the platform 625. The motor assembly 560 may send position sensor signals to the electronic processor 705 and receive control signals to operate a motor of the motor assembly 560 based on the position sensor signals. As described above, the shuttle drive 635 may be a motor assembly or an actuator. The shuttle drive 635 also includes a position sensor 650 (shown in
The pill sensor 240 communicates with the electronic processor 705 to provide an indication of whether or not a pill is dispensed through the conduit 640. The electronic processor 705 also controls the indicator system 250 to provide an indication of the status of each cartridge 515. The cartridge 515 may also include additional electronics 725 such as a cartridge sensor and a solenoid lock. The cartridge sensor determines whether the cartridge 515 is in a correct position in the universal feed cassette 505 and whether the cartridge 515 is installed properly. The solenoid lock keeps the cartridge 515 in position during a dispensing process to inhibit other medications (e.g., of a different kind than the ones being dispensed by the cartridge 515) from being added to the cartridge 515.
Referring to
In the example illustrated in
Referring to
The reservoir cover 855 covers a portion (e.g., a spout portion 870) of the reservoir 850. The reservoir cover 855 is pivotably attached to the spout portion 870 to pivot between an open position and a closed position. When a pharmacist is emptying the contents of the cartridge 840, the reservoir cover 855 pivots to the open position to allow the medications 180 to flow out of the reservoir 850 into the bulk containers. During the dispensing process, the cartridge mechanism 845 includes a stopper 846 to inhibit the reservoir cover 855 from opening. As such, the medications 180 within the reservoir 850 are not accessible outside the machine during the dispending process.
Teeth 875 are provided on the outer circumferential surface of the wheel 860. During the dispensing process, the teeth 875 interlock with teeth of a shaft driven by a motor assembly of the cartridge mechanism 845. The wheel 860 is provided with three scooping members 865 to scoop individual medications 180 from the reservoir 850. The scooping members 865 include an inward projection 866 extending into the wheel 860. The curved surface of the reservoir 850 guides the medications 180 into the inward projections of the scooping members 865. The scooping members 865 include a stopper 868 along a circumferential end of the inward projections that hold the medications 180 when the wheel 860 is being rotated. Scooping members 865 may be made in different sizes to accommodate the different sizes of medications 180. The scooping members 865 can be swapped to configure the cartridges 840 to dispense medications 180 of different sizes. The scooping members 865 may also be removed for cleaning. In some embodiments, rather than being separate from the wheel 860, the scooping members 865 may be formed integrally with the wheel 860. In these embodiments, the wheels 860 or cartridges 840 may be swapped to dispense medications 180 of different sizes.
The wheel 860 includes holding pins 880 (see
Referring to
Typically, a single LED device may be used below the platform 920 to illuminate the translucent platform 920. However, the single LED device may not provide uniform lighting through all of the surface area of the platform 920. Particularly, each LED device includes a light signature such that the center of the platform 920 is brighter than the edges of the platform. This irregularity in brightness may result in misidentifying medications 180 during the image recognition process. In order to provide uniform brightness across the surface are of the platform, several LED devices may be placed around the bottom surface of the platform. In some embodiments, the light signature of the LED device is detected and a backing 924 (see
The shuttle 925 may be moved laterally between the platform 920, over the reservoir 850, and over a conduit 935. The shuttle 925 transfers the medications from the platform 920 either to the reservoir 850 or to the conduit 935. The shuttle 925 is driven by the shuttle drive 930. The shuttle drive 930 may be a motor assembly, an actuator, or the like that moves the shuttle 925 between the platform 920, over the reservoir 850, and over the conduit 935. In the example illustrated, the shuttle drive 930 includes a rotating screw 932 that moves the shuttle 925 laterally between the platform 920, the reservoir 850, and the conduit 935.
The camera system 905 includes a camera 940 and a mirror 945. The camera 940 is positioned at the back of the cartridge mechanism 845. The camera 940 may be a still camera or a video camera that captures an image of the contents of the platform. The mirror 945 is placed directly above the platform 920 and is tilted at a 45-degree angle such that the camera 940 positioned at the back of the cartridge mechanism 845 can capture an image of the platform 920.
The motor assembly 910 includes a motor 950 that drives a shaft 955 positioned in the middle of the cartridge mechanism 845. The shaft 955 includes teeth 956 that interlock with the teeth 875 of the wheel 860 (see
The PCB 915 includes the electrical components of the cartridge mechanism 845. The PCB 915 is positioned on the side opposite that of the wheel 860. In some embodiments, the PCB 915 includes an antenna 960 (see
The lockout mechanism 916 is, for example, a lockout solenoid that prevents a cartridge 840 from being loaded onto the cartridge mechanism 845 when the lockout mechanism 916 is activated. During a dispensing process, not all cartridge mechanisms 845 are used to fill a prescription. In these situations, the lockout mechanism 916 is used to prevent cartridges 840 from being placed on inactive cartridge mechanism 845. In addition, the lockout mechanism 916 may be used to prevent an incompatible or wrong cartridge 840 from being loaded to the cartridge mechanism. For example, the cartridge mechanism 845 may read the RFID tag 965 to determine whether the correct and compatible cartridge 840 is being loaded to the cartridge mechanism. The cartridge mechanism 845 may only deactivate the lockout mechanism 916 when the correct cartridge 840 is being loaded to the cartridge mechanism 845. The lockout mechanism 916 may also be used to prevent the cartridge 840 from being removed from the cartridge mechanism 845. Particularly, the lockout mechanism 916 locks the cartridge 840 in place when loaded on to the cartridge mechanism 845. During the dispensing process, the lockout mechanism 916 is activated to prevent removal of the cartridge 840. The lockout mechanism 916 may be deactivated when the dispensing process is complete and the cartridge 840 can be removed from the cartridge mechanism 845.
In some embodiments, the electronic processor 970, the memory 975, and the transceiver 980 are implemented similar to the electronic processor 305, the memory 310, and the transceiver 315. In some embodiments, the universal feed cassette 805 or the automatic packager 800 may include a single electronic processor 970, a single memory 975, and a single transceiver 980 that control all the cartridge mechanism 845.
The camera system 905 receives control signals from the electronic processor 970. Based on the control signals received from the electronic processor 970, the camera system 905 controls the camera 940 and the lighting system that illuminates the platform 920. The motor assembly 910 may send position sensor 175 signals to the electronic processor 970 and receive control signals to operate a motor of the motor assembly 910 based on the position sensor 175 signals. As described above, the shuttle drive 930 may be a motor assembly or an actuator. The shuttle drive 930 may also include a position sensor to determine the position of the shuttle 925. The shuttle drive 930 may send the position sensor signals to the electronic processor 970, which sends control signals to the shuttle drive 930 to move the shuttle 925 based on the position sensor signals. In some embodiments, the shuttle system 900 may also include a shuttle home sensor, which indicates whether the shuttle 925 is at a home position. Signals from the shuttle home sensor are provided to the electronic processor 970 to control the movement of the shuttle 925.
The pill sensor 240 communicates with the electronic processor 970 to provide an indication of whether or not a pill is dispensed through the conduit 935. The electronic processor 970 also controls the indicator system 250 to provide an indication of the status of each cartridge 840. The indicator system 990 may include one or more LEDs provided behind a translucent plastic material. The electronic processor 970 may use the indicator system 990 to provide indications, for example, whether a cartridge 840 is correctly placed in the cartridge slot 820. The electronic processor 970 may activate, for example, a blue LED to indicate that a next cartridge 840 should be placed in the corresponding cartridge slot 820 (that is, the cartridge slot 820 corresponding to the cartridge mechanism 845 with the blue LED activated). The electronic processor 970 may activate, for example, a green LED to indicate that the cartridge 840 was correctly placed in the cartridge slot 820. The electronic processor 970 may activate, for example, a red LED to indicate that the cartridge 840 was not correctly placed in the cartridge slot 820. Additionally, the electronic processor 970 may use the indicator system 990 to provide indications on where to place a cartridge 840 and when to remove a cartridge 840. For example, the electronic processor 970 may activate a blue LED to indicate that a pharmacist can place a cartridge 840 in the cartridge slot 820 corresponding to the activated LED. The electronic processor 970 may activate a blue LED again to indicate that the dispensing process is complete and the cartridge 840 can be removed from the cartridge slot 820.
The method 1060 also includes advancing, using the cam and follower mechanism 885, the holding pin 880 into the scooping member 865 (at block 1070). Referring to
The method 1060 further includes holding the medication between the holding pin 880 and the stopper 868 (at block 1075). When the holding pin 880 is advanced, a medication 180 is held between the holding pin 880, the circumferential end of the scooping member 865, and the stopper 868. The medication 180 is held in such a way until the scooping member 865 moves past the top portion of the wheel 860.
The method 1060 also includes rotating, using the motor assembly 910, the scooping member 865 past the top portion of the wheel 860 (at block 1080). As discussed above, the motor assembly 910 rotates the wheel 860 to rotate the scooping members 865. The motor assembly 910 may also include a position sensor (not shown) to detect a position of the wheel 860. For example, the motor assembly 910 may include a hall sensor to detect magnets placed at certain locations on the wheel 860 to determine the position of the wheel 860. In other embodiments, the position sensor may be an optical sensor or the like.
The method 1060 further includes retracting, using the cam and follower mechanism 885, the holding pin 880 to drop the medication 180 on to the platform 920 (or for example, a verification system that verifies that an expected medication 180 (e.g., correct, single, and unbroken medication 180) is delivered (at block 1085). Referring to
Thus, the invention provides, among other things, a universal feed mechanism for an automatic packager.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20200165014 A1 | May 2020 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62710353 | Feb 2018 | US | |
62572204 | Oct 2017 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 16160535 | Oct 2018 | US |
Child | 16777336 | US |