View Online Forward Subscribe Home
Healthcare PackagingPharmaceutical, medical device, and nutraceutical news    Editor-in-Chief, Jim Butschli
Sponsor January 14, 2009 | Edited by Jim Butschli

New sanitary dry-filling technology engineered to enhance product safety

Learn about a new auger filler technology specifically for pharma and nutraceutical applications designed to protect product against bacteria, metal and other foreign contaminants, meeting demanding regulatory requirements.

Spee-Dee Packaging Machinery

Complimentary Web Seminar - Reducing the Validation Merry-Go-Round

Lower the time and cost of computer system validation while ensuring FDA compliance. Attend this session to discover how web-based applications reduce the burden of validation and significantly lower costs while maintaining strict compliance with regulations: FDA 21 CFR Part 11, GCP, GMP and Sarbanes-Oxley.

PRISYMID

Flawlessly Detect 0.3mm Stainless Steel

PHANTOM Pharmaceutical metal detectors provide detection/rejection of the smallest contaminants in tablets/capsules. Designed & constructed for FDA compliance, detectors meet stringent pharmaceutical industry QA requirements. This compact detector can be easily angled & height-adjusted to suit any press configuration.

Fortress Technology, Inc.

SUSTAINABLE PACKAGING

EPS containers deliver for sanofi pasteur's vaccine shipments

Environmental advantages persuade sanofi pasteur to select expanded polystyrene containers to ship its vaccines; healthcare provider customers also benefit.

By Jim Butschli, Editor

Recycled expanded polystyrene containers make for a sustainable packaging solution for shipments of sanofi pasteur's liquid and freeze-dried vaccines.

EPS, which is often criticized for its environmental impact, is proving to be a sound material choice, according to Bill Tarabek, director, U.S. distribution for sanofi pasteur, the Lyon, France-based vaccines division of the Sanofi-Aventis Group. "EPS is not environmentally unfriendly—it's just the opposite," Tarabek contends.

"Unlike other material such as paper, EPS does not degrade and will not leach any substances into groundwater, nor will it form harmful gases," he adds. "So although EPS can be safely disposed in today's landfills, sanofi pasteur developed a Return and Recycle Program for our customers who prefer to recycle. Expanded polystyrene is 100-percent recyclable. To be clear, we are not talking about everyday packing peanuts, these are white shipping containers."

Since January 2008, sanofi pasteur has offered its U.S. customers a prepaid mail-back recycling program that works through a partnership with the Alliance of Foam Packaging Recyclers. AFPR was founded in 1991 to develop an industry-based collection infrastructure.

Editor's Picks

Pharmaceutical makers shine in sustainability survey >>

Counterfeit products gateway to real thing? >>

Patent expirations, generics, and packaging >>

Alka-Seltzer labeling blunder leads to recall >>

Sanofi Pasteur's customers—physician's offices, hospitals, and healthcare providers—open the EPS shipper, which contains refrigerated and/or frozen gel packs to maintain the products within the necessary temperature range. The packaged vials are removed from a polyethylene bag. Sanofi Pasteur supplies tape strips and a recyclable shipping label to customers who then apply the label to the box, tape the lid to the box, and give it to their courier for shipment to a recycler.

AFPR's deputy director Virginia Lyle credits JML Recycling, a division of Sebright Products for working with sanofi pasteur—and some additional pharmaceutical companies—"to make their cooler recycling program work. The company created innovative ways to handle the container labels [that could otherwise impede the recycling process]," she says.

Expanded EPS use pleases customers

Although sanofi pasteur still uses limited quantities of polyurethane containers, Tarabek says, "Polyurethane is not recyclable. We continue to rely more on EPS for as many of our boxes as we can." He says the company recently completed a project that will employ tens of thousands of EPS containers "for a temperature-sensitive product that historically shipped in polyurethane boxes. With the help of our shipping container vendor we developed a recyclable EPS solution that will make our customers happy. The fact that we took an entire product line and moved it from polyurethane to EPS also provided an outcome that we like, as it will reduce our packaging and freight costs."

Tarabek says sanofi pasteur uses four sizes of EPS containers right now that handle anywhere from one vaccine vial to 200 vials. These temperature-sensitive products are shipped via either one- or two-day small parcel service from the company's three U.S. distribution centers.

"About 75- to 90 percent of our shipments are in EPS boxes. In the past, the polyurethane containers posed challenges for our customers because they were bulky to dispose in their regular trash pickups," Tarabek explains.

"Physicians and healthcare practitioners, like the rest of the country, are becoming more and more attuned to the environment and the significance of the actions they take. For years, sanofi pasteur has worked hard on sustainability initiatives, in our manufacturing processes, how we use our water, and in the use of packaging materials where we try to improve our stewardship of the environment. Our customers think it's important, and we believe that there is a competitive advantage to being green."

In the first year of the program, more than 180,000 containers were returned for recycling. Last year the program grew by 10% with uptake exceeding 200,000 containers.

Asked about the economics of the move to recyclable EPS containers, Tarabek admits, "Our recycling program is not cost-neutral. There is a cost to the company, but management believes in being green. It helps improve our customer relationship and loyalty because it helps solve a problem for our customers who no longer have to pay for disposal of the former containers, or to send them to a landfill. They get a good feeling that 'this is going to a recycling center, it's easier to get rid of, and I just have to put a label on it and hand it to my driver the next day.'"



Credit card-sized pack wins pharmaceutical award

A wallet pack for Switzerland dental product company FKG Dentaire earns recognition.

An elegant, compact package with a viewing window and package insert in a side flap helped the special "D-RaCe" wallet pack win the 2009 Pharmaceutical award from Pro Carton/ECMA, the Assn. of European Cartonboard and Carton Manufacturers.

Rondo AG developed the credit card-sized package for Switzerland-based FKG Dentaire's dental tool. Rondo belongs to the Körber Medipak Group, the pharmaceuticals division of Hamburg's Körber Group. Carton board blanks are provided by Iggesund Paperboard Europe.

The D-RaCe visually highlights the dental tool's contents through its transparent viewing window. This window is particularly practical and useful in this case, where FKG Dentaire also packages other tools for dentists' use in the wallet. The window enables the dentist to see the type of tool inside at a glance.

The pack also offers ease of handling. Once the wallet has been opened, the tools can be removed easily. The tools are secured in the packaging until they are removed. The inserted booklet is also easy to remove and provides space for information.

Rondo prints the special wallets for FKG Dentaire in the company's corporate identity colors, with the appearance of the packaging further enhanced by a dispersion varnish finish. Körber Medipak employs a total of 720 people and achieves annual sales of approximately 110 million euros.

Pro Carton's main purpose is to promote the use of cartons and carton board to brand owners, the trade, designers, the media, and politicians as an economically and ecologically balanced packaging medium. Every year, the association organizes a contest rewarding the best ideas.

–Jim Butschli

NEW Products

MATERIAL

Blister-card compliance package

  • traditional fold-over, heat-seal Key-Pak® Blister Card is approved to be F=1 child-resistant, and is senior-friendly
  • push-through pull-tab indicator helps to reduce dosing errors; "zipper" design allows for simple removal of the rear blister-card panel and provides damage-free product dispensing
  • single-component package is compatible with both thermoformed and cold-formed blisters

Keystone Folding Box Co.

MACHINE

Plunger rod inserting machine

  • compact, easy-to-use Hasta machine inserts plunger rods into syringe barrels
  • available in speeds of 12,000 or 24,000 pieces/hr, with the 12,000/hr version upgradable to 24,000, even after delivery
  • equipped with a print-and-apply labeler with vision systems and control devices, and can interface with equipment both upstream and downstream

MG America

Upcoming events:

ARC's Fourteenth Annual Orlando Forum
Rethinking operational excellence: Innovative solutions for the changing economy. February 8-10 at the Rosen Centre Hotel in Orlando, FL

WestPack
Packaging equipment, machinery, materials and services. Co-located with ATX West, Electronics West, Green Manufacturing Expo, MD&M West, Pacific Design & Manufacturing, and PLASTEC West. February 9 - 11 at the Anaheim Convention Center in Anaheim, CA.

FUSE
Reclaim the Future. Design and culture, brand identity and packaging. Trump International  Hotel & Tower, Chicago, IL on April 14-16.

ANNOUNCEMENT

Follow Healthcare Packaging on Twitter!

Healthcare Packaging is now on Twitter! Follow us for breaking news and topical updates about pharmaceutical, biologic, medical device and nutraceutical packaging, posted by Twitter Evangelist, Liz Tierney. We want to hear from you!

Related newsletters and Web sites

Once or twice monthly. Don't miss intelligence crucial to your job and business!

The items in the left-hand sponsor column are considered sponsored links. Healthcare Packaging may share your contact information with sponsors as detailed in our privacy policy, but we will NEVER share your contact information with a sponsor whose content you have not viewed.