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CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY COMMISSION

Consumer Product Safety Commission

CFR Citation: 16 CFR Part 1700

NOTICE: PROPOSED RULES

ACTION: Poison prevention packaging:

DOCUMENT ACTION: Notice of petition.

SUBJECT CATEGORY: Petition Requesting Amendment to Child-Resistance Testing Pass/ Fail Criterion for Unit Dose Packaging (Petition No. PP 03-1)

DATES: The Office of the Secretary must receive comments on the petition by August 15, 2003.

DOCUMENT SUMMARY: The current regulatory definition of a child-resistance test failure for unit dose, i.e., nonreclosable packaging under the Poison Prevention Packaging Act (PPPA), is a child gaining access to the number of individual unit doses that constitute the amount that ``may cause serious personal injury or serious illness'' or more than eight individual unit doses, whichever is less. The Commission has received a petition (Petition No. PP 031) requesting that the Commission amend that requirement to eliminate the first criterion related to the toxicity of the substance to be packaged and define a unit dose packaging failure to be a child gaining access to more than eight individual unit doses. The Commission solicits written comments concerning the petition.

SUMMARY: Child-resistant package requirements—; Unit dose packaging; pass/fail criterion; petition,


SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION

By letter of March 17, 2003, and supplemental information provided by letter of May 5, 2003, the Healthcare Compliance Packaging Council (HCPC) requests a change to the Commission's regulatory requirements under the PPPA for testing the ability of unit dose childresistant, i.e., ``special'' packaging to resist attempts by children to open it. The HCPC request addresses the portion of the requirements defining a testing failure for unit dose packaging. Unit dose packaging is nonreclosable packaging typically including a limited number of tablets (usually one or two) per unit, e.g., blister, strip or pouch packaging.

The HCPC members include companies involved in the manufacture of pharmaceuticalgrade plastic films, aluminum, and paperboard used to produce unit dose blister and strip packaging, as well as manufacturers of machinery used to create unit dose formats. HCPC corporate members include firms that provide packaging services to the pharmaceutical manufacturers on a contract basis, as well as companies that purchase bulk quantities of drug products from pharmaceutical manufacturers and repackage those products into unit dose and other formats for use by hospitals, clinics, and other similar facilities.\1\

\1\ March 17, 2003 HCPC letter at 3.

The child resistance testing requirements were promulgated under authority of the PPPA. The testing requirements are the mechanism for assessing the ability of a particular form of ``special packaging'' to resist attempts by children to gain access to its contents. The definition of a childresistance test failure for unit dose packaging is a child gaining access to the number of individual unit doses that constitute the amount that may cause ``serious personal injury or serious illness'' or more than eight individual unit doses, whichever is less.\2\

\2\ 16 CFR 1700.20(a)(2)(ii).

The HCPC's specific request is as follows. ``The definition of test failure for unit dose packaging should be an objective standard, i.e., `any child who opens or gains access to more than 8 individual units during the full 10 minutes of testing.' '' The HCPC asserts that ``unit dose packaging is inherently safer than capandvial closures'' and that ``the current regulation creates a disincentive for pharmaceutical manufacturers and packagers to use safer unit dose packaging.''\3\ \3\ March 17, 2003 HCPC letter at 35.

The HCPC request has been docketed as petition number PP 031. The Commission is particularly interested in receiving comments on the petition from: (1) Consumers; (2) dispensing physicians; (3) poison control centers; (4) pharmaceutical manufacturers; (5) chain drug store, government, independent, and hospital pharmacies; and (6) drug repackagers, wholesalers and distributors.

Interested parties may obtain a copy of the petition by writing or calling the Office of the Secretary, Consumer Product Safety Commission, Washington, DC 20207; telephone (301) 5040800. The petition is available on the CPSC World Wide Web site at http://www.cpsc.gov. A copy of the petition is also available for inspection
from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, in the Commission's Public Reading Room, Room 419, 4330 EastWest Highway, Bethesda, Maryland.

Dated: June 10, 2003.
Todd A. Stevenson,
Secretary, Consumer Product Safety Commission.
[FR Doc. 0315064 Filed 61303; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 635501P

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT Rockelle Hammond, Office of the Secretary, Consumer Product Safety Commission, Washington, DC 20207; telephone (301) 5046833; email: rhammond@cpsc.gov.


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