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Maryland Poison Center Celebrates National Poison Prevention Week 2014

Maryland Poison Center will join poison centers across the country in celebrating National Poison Prevention Week March 16-22.

By Malissa Carroll
March 17, 2014

In 1961, President John F. Kennedy named the third week of March as National Poison Prevention Week (NPPW) to help raise awareness about the dangers of poisoning and how to prevent them. This year, NPPW will be observed March 16-22, and will focus on several poison prevention-related themes:

The Maryland Poison Center (MPC), along with America’s other 55 poison centers, is committed to safeguarding the health and well-being of every American through poison prevention and free, confidential, expert medical services,” says Bruce Anderson, PharmD, DABAT, director of operations for the MPC. “Our poison center responds to calls 24 hours a day, seven days a week in order to help those who have been exposed to toxic substances.”

According to the American Association of Poison Control Centers (AAPCC), US poison centers answered more than 3.3 million calls, including approximately 2.2 million calls about human exposures to poisons, with more than half involving children younger than six, in 2012. More than 87 percent of the people who called with poison emergencies were managed on-site without referral to a health care facility, saving an estimated $1.19 billion in medical expenses.

The MPC, part of the Department of Pharmacy Practice and Science (PPS) at the University of Maryland School of Pharmacy, is a 24-hour telephone service that offers free, fast, and confidential expert advice about poisonings and overdoses. Certified by the AAPCC as a regional poison center, the MPC has provided poisoning treatment advice, education, and prevention services to Marylanders since 1972.

“Poisoning can occur at any time and to anyone,” says Anderson, who is also an associate professor in PPS. “The MPC works 24/7 to help those who have been exposed to a poison or to answer the public’s questions about a potential poisoning. We also reach out to our communities with information about how poisonings occur and ways to prevent them. Prevention is the best possible medicine.”

Although approximately half of the calls received by poison centers involve children younger than six years old, teens, adults, and seniors are also at risk for poisoning.

To help prevent poisonings in your home, follow these tips from the MPC:

National Poison Prevention Week is commissioned by the Poison Prevention Week Council, an organization of public and private partners committed to reducing unintentional poisonings and promoting poison prevention.

Families in the state of Maryland who would like more information about poison prevention are invited to request a Mr. Yuk packet for their homes. This packet contains poison safety information, Mr. Yuk stickers, telephone stickers, and a magnet that can help families prevent or prepare for poisoning emergencies.

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