Maryland Poison Center Celebrates National Poison Prevention Week
Observed March 16-22, National Poison Prevention Week helps raise awareness about the dangers of poisonings and promotes steps that everyone can take to prevent them.

By Emily Paterson, MPH, CHES
March 10, 2025
Observed March 16-22, National Poison Prevention Week helps raise awareness about the dangers of poisonings and promotes steps that everyone can take to prevent them.
Since 1962, the third full week of March has been celebrated by presidential decree as National Poison Prevention Week (NPPW), providing poison centers across the country — including the Maryland Poison Center (MPC) at the University of Maryland School of Pharmacy (UMSOP) — an opportunity to raise awareness about the dangers of poisonings and highlight steps that everyone can take to prevent them. This year, NPPW will be observed March 16-22, with the theme “When the Unexpected Happens, We’re Here for You 24/7.”
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), poisoning is the leading cause of unintentional injury death in the U.S., with most of these deaths caused by drug and medicine misuse and abuse. The MPC, part of UMSOP’s Department of Practice, Sciences, and Health Outcomes Research (P-SHOR), is a 24-hour telephone service that offers free, fast, and confidential expert advice about poisonings and overdoses. The MPC has provided poisoning treatment advice, education, and prevention services to individuals living across the state of Maryland since 1972 and is certified by the American Association of Poison Control Centers as a regional poison center.
“The MPC, along with the nation’s other 54 poison centers, recognizes Poison Prevention Week to draw special attention to the importance of poison safety practices as a way to decrease poisonings from happening,” says Angel Bivens, BS Pharm, MBA, CSPI, managing director of the MPC. “We view every week as poison prevention week. But when the unexpected happens, we have specially- trained pharmacists and nurses available 24/7 to provide customized help for callers’ specific situations– something searching the internet can’t do. All calls are free and confidential.”
Although approximately one-third of the calls received by the MPC involve children younger than six years old, teens, adults, and older adults are also at risk for poisoning.
To help prevent poisoning in your home, follow these tips from the MPC:
- Program the poison center phone number in your cell phone. Your local poison center can be reached anywhere in the United States by dialing 1-800-222-1222.
- Follow the Poison Safety Checklist to make sure all medicines, poisons, and harmful household products are stored up, away, and out of sight of children.
- Read and follow directions on the label before using medicines and household products.
- Keep all household products and medicines in their original containers. Never put chemicals or cleaning products in empty food or drink containers.
- Always ask for medicine in child-resistant containers;, but remember that these containers are not child-proof. If given enough time, children can often open the safety caps.
- Put medicines away after each dose, even if they will be taken again in a few hours.
- Know the names of plants in and around your home and remove poisonous plants from the house and yard.
- Have a carbon monoxide alarm in your home.
Individuals can participate in NPPW by following and sharing posts from the Maryland Poison Center on Facebook, X, Instagram, and its eAntidote blog. Also subscribe to our e-newsletter, Poison Prevention Press.
Families living in Maryland who would like more information about poison prevention can request a poison safety packet for their home. This packet contains information about poison safety, Mr. Yuk stickers, telephone stickers, and a magnet that can help families prevent or prepare for poisoning emergencies.