Like use a cheap brown paper bag and stick the label on that. Cheaper and much less plastic waste. If I wanted a pill bottle, I can buy my own.
Like use a cheap brown paper bag and stick the label on that. Cheaper and much less plastic waste. If I wanted a pill bottle, I can buy my own.
Kids man. Kids will get into everything. The pill bottle is supposed to slow them down.
And pets. A paper bag with smells inside means some dog will eat it.
They sell bottles with time locks and those that require keys.
Much safer than the push down screw type
Are you asking because you want to see less plastic or you have issues with a saftey cap that doesn’t require a key?
The bottles my pharmacy uses are terrible. I literally just dump the contents into a different container; otherwise it would be impossible for me to get them out one at a time.
Oh, so you have no idea about design constraints.
Are you perhaps thinking of the packaging directly from the manufacturer and not the containers that the pharmacist uses to dole out medication to multiple customers?
Either way.
Well I am familiar with the concept; I don’t know what the exact constraints that exist beyond the basic chemistry of the medicines themselves and what would help them remain safe and stable. With a little bit of knowledge about mechanical design criteria for human usage. Do you perhaps know of any constraints beyond those?
Paper is probably the worst material to protect drugs over any time frame other than using it in the next days. I’m not entirely sure what problem you are trying to solve.
If it’s about how those bottles dispense the medicine, it sounds like a bit of a skill issue.