Opinion editor's note: Editorials represent the opinions of the Star Tribune Editorial Board, which operates independently from the newsroom.
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Hospitals discard an estimated $3 billion a year in unused prescription medications nationwide. The value of unused drugs thrown away by long-term care facilities: another $2 billion annually.
At the same time, an alarming number of Americans struggle to pay when it is time to fill or refill a prescription. "About three in 10 say they haven't taken their medicine as prescribed due to costs," according to an October 2022 report from the respected Kaiser Family Foundation.
So many people forgoing their medications when so many drugs go into the trash is tragic. There should be a way to keep unused, unexpired pills out of landfills and get them at little to no cost to those who can't afford prescribed treatments.
Fortunately, conscientious Minnesota health care advocates are working on just such a solution. RoundtableRx, a nonprofit "drug repository" and brainchild of University of Minnesota pharmacy students, has energetically embraced this noble mission since lawmakers passed legislation in 2019 setting up the program.
Now it's time for the Legislature to help RoundtableRx expand to serve more Minnesotans. The organization is seeking $450,000 annually in state funding over the next two years to supplement its sole full-time employee with two more staffers. In addition, the state funding would enable the organization to find roomier headquarters than its current northeast Minneapolis space, which is smaller than many studio-sized apartments.
The funding request is modest and less than the public support provided by other states with established drug repository programs. The sum is also a timely, important investment in public health.