Kornick, owner and design principal of packaging design and development firm Kornick Lindsay, says that "although the number of Internet prescription drug purchases is small today (4%, or about $8 billion dollars), 25 percent of adults have searched for information on prescription drugs and [some experts] are saying that Internet drug sales today are on the verge of exploding in the same way the use of the Internet in real estate is growing."
Economics and convenience serve as the motivators. Concerns are trust and safety as 62% of Americans think that purchasing prescription drugs online are less safe than purchasing them locally. ICG, a firm that investigates fraudulent Internet activity, estimates that 80% of drugs sold on-line are considered counterfeit.
"So the dilemma," says Kornick, "is that consumers would like to buy their prescriptions online, but they fear getting ripped off or killed by a bad batch of who-knows-what."
Kornick believes packaging will play a major major role in this area. "It's not simply a matter of creating the ultimate anti-counterfeit package. We all know the problem with anti-counterfeit solutions. One, the counterfeiters will copy any single solution if the carrot is big enough. Two, most anti-counterfeit solutions are not consumer friendly. Who do you know that has a special magnifying device to read the encrypted code on the hologram or an RFID reader at home? I see a system where packaging coupled with direct consumer Internet communication can provide assurance to consumers."
Kornick's idea: "Design primary or secondary package systems that contain a 'visible or physical identity' that can be modified and varied frequently to thwart the counterfeiter and signal product integrity to consumers. Communicate the 'identity' to the consumer with the Internet order confirmation so that the consumer knows what to look for in order to confirm the product's integrity. The robustness of the identity would vary with the probability of counterfeiting—the higher the probability, the more varied the identity."[HCP]
Joe Kornick
Economics and convenience serve as the motivators. Concerns are trust and safety as 62% of Americans think that purchasing prescription drugs online are less safe than purchasing them locally. ICG, a firm that investigates fraudulent Internet activity, estimates that 80% of drugs sold on-line are considered counterfeit.
"So the dilemma," says Kornick, "is that consumers would like to buy their prescriptions online, but they fear getting ripped off or killed by a bad batch of who-knows-what."
Kornick believes packaging will play a major major role in this area. "It's not simply a matter of creating the ultimate anti-counterfeit package. We all know the problem with anti-counterfeit solutions. One, the counterfeiters will copy any single solution if the carrot is big enough. Two, most anti-counterfeit solutions are not consumer friendly. Who do you know that has a special magnifying device to read the encrypted code on the hologram or an RFID reader at home? I see a system where packaging coupled with direct consumer Internet communication can provide assurance to consumers."
Kornick's idea: "Design primary or secondary package systems that contain a 'visible or physical identity' that can be modified and varied frequently to thwart the counterfeiter and signal product integrity to consumers. Communicate the 'identity' to the consumer with the Internet order confirmation so that the consumer knows what to look for in order to confirm the product's integrity. The robustness of the identity would vary with the probability of counterfeiting—the higher the probability, the more varied the identity."[HCP]
Joe Kornick