Republished July 30, 2024
Some medicines come in patches that you apply to your skin. Examples include: NicoDerm CQ (nicotine), used to quit smoking; Climara (estradiol), used to treat symptoms of menopause; and fentanyl, a powerful medicine used to relieve serious, long-term pain. Patches are designed to give a constant amount of medicine over a certain period of time, usually several days. New patches contain lots of medicine, but used patches can still contain medicine after you take them off. Both new and used patches can be dangerous for children or pets.
Children may think patches are like stickers, tattoos, or Band-Aids. In a tragic story, a 4-year-old child died after placing a fentanyl patch on his body. His mother had been using these patches for pain from Crohn's disease, a digestive tract disorder. After she found her son dead, she also found a torn wrapper in an overturned bedroom trashcan. It was not clear whether the boy stuck a used patch on his body or opened a new one and applied it.
Children have also been exposed to medicine patches that fell off a family member. In one case, the child sat on the fallen patch and it stuck to her upper thigh. One child removed a patch while his grandmother was sleeping and applied it to himself. In these cases, the patches were noticed right away and the children were not injured. Most patch directions say to fold the sticky sides together and then throw them in the trash or flush them down the toilet.
Here's what you can do: Consider the following recommendations to keep children, pets, and the environment safe while using and disposing of medicine patches.