The safety effects of child-resistant packaging for oral prescription drugs. Two decades of experience

JAMA. 1996 Jun 5;275(21):1661-5.

Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the effectiveness of child-resistant packaging in reducing the mortality rate for children younger than 5 years from the unintentional ingestion of oral prescription drugs.

Design: Annual mortality rates for children younger than 5 years associated with the unintentional ingestion of oral prescription drugs are constructed for 1964 through 1992. The effect of child-resistant packaging on the child mortality rate during the postintervention period (1974 through 1992) is evaluated with a multivariate time series regression model. The analysis controls for changes in the consumption of oral prescription drugs over time and for long-term safety trends.

Setting: United States.

Subjects: Children younger than 5 years.

Main outcome measure: Estimated reductions in the child mortality rate associated with the use of child-resistant packaging.

Results: After controlling for covariates, the use of child-resistant packaging was associated with an annual reduction in the oral prescription drug-related mortality rate of 1.40 (95% confidence interval, 0.85-1.95) deaths per million children younger than 5 years. This suggests a reduction of about 460 child deaths from 1974, the year oral prescription drugs became subject to child-resistant packaging requirements, through 1992-a mortality rate reduction of about 45% from levels projected without the child-resistant requirements.

Conclusion: Child-resistant packaging reduces child mortality from the unintentional ingestion of oral prescription drugs.

MeSH terms

  • Administration, Oral
  • Child, Preschool
  • Consumer Product Safety
  • Drug Packaging*
  • Drug Prescriptions
  • Humans
  • Infant
  • Infant Mortality* / trends
  • Models, Statistical
  • Regression Analysis
  • Safety
  • United States / epidemiology