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8 - January 6, 2012 | Hudson - Litchfield News


A Healthy New Year’s Resolution From Your Pharmacist: Clean Out Your Medicine Cabinet


submitted by the American Pharmacists Association As the New Year begins, and healthy resolutions are made, the American Pharmacists Association (APhA) is encouraging Americans to clean out their medicine cabinets. Pharmacists recommend patients clean out their medicine cabinets once a year to dispose of all the unused and expired medications that accumulated over the previous


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Law enforcement and higher education officials from across New Hampshire called on the House Tuesday, January 3, to reject a bill that would allow guns in college classrooms, dorms, libraries and across public higher education campuses. House bill 334 is one of three the House could possibly take action on as early tomorrow that will severely weaken New Hampshire’s decades-old gun laws and potentially put public safety at risk. Gov. John Lynch today joined New Hampshire police chiefs, sheriffs and officials from the Department of Safety and the state’s university and community college officials in urging the House to vote down three bills that would weaken state gun regulations. “These bills represent a radical departure from our approach to public safety here in New Hampshire,” Gov. Lynch said. “I am proud of the fact that we live in the safest state in the nation. New Hampshire is a place with very little violent crime, a place where families and seniors can feel safe in their homes, their neighborhoods and their communities. We need to be doing all we can to continue to ensure New Hampshire remains the safe state that it currently is.” Currently, state law gives public colleges


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and universities the discretion to regulate guns on campuses. House Bill 334 would eliminate that discretion and give sole authority to regulate guns on any public


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many medications to treat colds, headaches and infections, as well as more serious conditions,” stated Thomas Menighan, CEO and Executive Vice President, APhA. “These medications play an important role in helping patients obtain better health and wellness, but if we do not store and dispose of them properly, they can become a hazard. When they fall into the wrong hands, these medications have the potential to be abused, and if improperly disposed of, they can harm wildlife, pets and other people. Make sure to talk to your pharmacist about the best storage of medications in your household, the length of time a medication should be


kept and the efficacy of that medication past its expiration date.”


Prescription drug abuse is the Nation’s fastest-


growing drug problem. While there has been a marked decrease in the use of some illegal drugs like cocaine, data from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH), show that nearly one-third of people aged 12 and over, who used drugs for the first time in 2009, began by using a prescription drugs non-medically. The National Institute on Drug Abuse tells us that every day in the US, an average of 2,000 teenagers use prescription medication for the first time without a physician’s guidance. The same NSDUH survey found that over 70 percent of people who abused prescription pain relievers got them from friends or relatives. Tips for Storing and Cleaning Out Your Medicine Cabinet or Other Medication Storage Areas: • Medications should be stored in a secured area - up, away and out of sight of children and teenagers - that has low humidity, a stable temperature and adequate lighting.


• Check the date on everything in your medicine cabinet and dispose of anything that has passed the expiration date.


• Dispose of anything you have not used in the past 12 months or that you no longer need. Do not share medications with others.


• Dispose of medicines that are no longer in their original container, have changed color or odor, or that can no longer be identified.


• Do not flush unused or expired medications and do not pour them down a sink or drain. They should be disposed of properly in the household trash or through your community’s medication disposal program, when available. Talk to your pharmacist or visit www. smarxtdisposal.net for tips on how to properly dispose of your medications. About the American Pharmacists Association The American Pharmacists Association, founded in 1852 as the American Pharmaceutical Association, is a 501 (c)(6) organization, representing more than 62,000 practicing pharmacists, pharmaceutical scientists, student pharmacists, pharmacy technicians and others interested in advancing the profession. APhA, dedicated to helping all pharmacists improve medication use and advance patient care, is the first-established and largest association of pharmacists in the United States.


‘No Guns in Classrooms or Dorms’


land or in publicly owned or financed buildings, except for courts. This dramatic change in state law would eliminate prohibitions on guns at the Verizon Wireless Arena and Fisher Cat Stadium in Manchester. It would allow firearms to be carried at the State Hospital, which treats people suffering from mental illness, at the state’s 10 county jails, and at state parks, including Hampton Beach. Also, the state owns land and leases office buildings to private companies at Pease International Tradeport. This legislation would even prevent those private companies from prohibiting guns in their offices.


“I don’t think that is a message we should be sending to businesses we are trying to bring to New Hampshire, and could threaten the success of Pease,” Gov. Lynch said. “I ask the House to listen our higher education administrators and to law enforcement and reject this reckless legislation. It is uncalled for and unnecessary.”


In addition to House Bill 334, the House is will also soon take action on House Bills 536 and 194. House Bill 536 would allow just about anyone to carry a gun without a license, putting the public and law enforcement at an immediate disadvantage. Stripping away the permitting process, which has been in place for decades, would remove an important protection that


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helps ensure a person with a violent past, or a history of mental illness is not allowed to carry a concealed weapon. House Bill 194 would drastically re-write the definition of a loaded rifle or shotgun, as a result, overturning a decades old law that prohibits carrying loaded rifles and shotguns in vehicles. “It is absurd to believe that a rifle with bullets in it is not really loaded. It takes a fraction of a second move a round in the chamber of a rifle or a shotgun and shoot. That is a loaded gun, regardless of what the supporters of this bill say,” Gov. Lynch said. Under this bill, a rifle or shotgun would not be considered loaded if there were bullets in the gun, as long as a round was not in the chamber. Current law and common understanding consider a rifle when there are bullets in it – whether there is a round in the chamber or not. “The combination of these bills has the real potential to lead to an increase in violence. And with the legislature’s recent expansion of deadly force, and I am very concerned that New Hampshire cannot and will not be as safe as it currently is. That is why if these bills reach my desk, I will veto them,” Gov. Lynch said. “I support gun rights and the rights of responsible gun owners are already protected here in New Hampshire. The limited restrictions we do have in place now are proper, and constitutional.”


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