Post Time:Jan 25,2019Classify:Company NewsView:1179
Gerresheimer will take the wraps off their first snap-on cap with
child-resistant (CR) solution at booth B62 at this year's Pharmapack,
which will open its doors between February 6 and February 7 in Paris,
Porte de Versailles. Conventional child-resistant screw caps are made of
two compo- nents.
“Packaging drugs in a childproof manner is imperative. Small children
explore their world by touching everything and putting everything in
their mouths. This is why we have to stay cautious and alert to keep
drugs from finding their way into children's hands,” explains Niels
Dürung, Global Executive Vice President Plastic Packaging.
Packaging like the new Duma Standard CR container with its child-
resistant cap is designed to prevent young children from getting hold of
items like medicines that could be harmful to their health. Many
products that could pose a threat to young children’s health are
required to incor- porate a safety device under national and
international law. ISO stand- ard 8317 (2015) applies in Europe and US
16 CFR section 1700.20 in the U.S.
ISO 8317 (2015)
ISO 8317 (2015) is the international standard for reclosable child-
resistant packaging. It governs both pharmaceutical and technical chem-
ical products.
The standard describes two test procedures, which any packaging to be
tested must be subject to. One test is run with a group of up to 200
young children aged between 42 and 51 months. They must not be able to
open the packaging, which is filled with a harmless replacement sub-
stance. At the same time, a test group of older people aged between 50
and 70 must
be able to open and reclose it without imparing the child-resistant
func- tion. Packaging will only meet the requirements of ISO 8317 (2015)
if the tests demonstrate that they are safe for children and
user-friendly for the elderly, as defined in the standard.
The test
During the test, children have an initial five minutes to try opening
the packaging. Afterwards, they are shown how to open it once without
any explanation. They then have another five minutes to try opening it.
The packaging is deemed child-resistant if no more than 15 percent of
children are able to open it within the first five minutes. A maximum of
20 percent of children are permitted to succeed in getting at the
contents of the packaging for the entire duration of the test.
If only a few young children manage to open the packaging, the test
group could be reduced to fewer than 200 children as part of the se-
quential evaluation process.
Tests with older people aged between 50 and 70
During the test, the participants have an initial five minutes to try
opening the packaging. They are not shown how to do so besides the
instruction on the packaging. In the second phase, they only have one
minute to try and open it. The packaging is deemed suitable for older
people as long as at least 90 percent of the test group are able to open
and reclose it again without imparing the child-resistant function
within a reasonable amount of time.
Source: glassglobal.comAuthor: Shangyi
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