Accreditation of regional poison centers and certification of poison center personnel
Publication of the annual report of the American Association of Poison Control Centers’ National Poison Data System, published every December in Clinical Toxicology
Interaction with private and governmental agencies whose activities influence poisoning and poison centers
Co-hosting a national conference of poison center leaders that includes scientific presentations, business meetings, and committee meetings
Development of public and professional education programs and materials
Collection and analysis of national poisoning data
Promotion and support of legislation to improve poison prevention practices and programs
Participation on and partnerships with national coalitions and committees to advance public safety and poison prevention
Poison Centers
United States poison centers compose a remarkable nationwide medical calls system. A single toll-free telephone number immediately connects a caller to a specialist in poison information anywhere in the U.S. at any time, day or night. A board-certified toxicologist can be reached within a few moments to provide confidential, expert medical advice to people who have been exposed to a poison. This extraordinary system is maintained by the voluntary cooperation of the 55-member organizations of the AAPCC.
1-800-222-1222
The 24-hour national toll-free Poison Help line provides immediate poison information and emergency instructions to all callers regardless of health insurance, immigration status, or language preference from any U.S. telephone or cell phone. Calls are answered by physicians, nurses and pharmacists with highly specialized training in poison management. Poison center services are accessible to all populations, including under-served and undocumented groups, those speaking one of 150 languages and those utilizing telecommunication devices for the hearing-impaired. More than 70 percent of all cases received by poison centers can be safely and effectively treated at home, without need for further medical care.
Cost Savings for the Health-Care System
Substantial cost savings have been attributed to poison center reductions in unnecessary emergency department care through accurate assessment and triage of poisoning exposures. The public health and cost benefits from poison center pre-hospital management of patients not needing ED visits favorably impacts the self-pay or copaying general public, the health-care institution supporting the costs of indigent care, the commercial insurance companies and governmental health-care funding agencies. Poison centers assess and manage more than 70 percent of poison exposures over the phone, eliminating the need for callers to seek further medical care. This reduction in medically unnecessary ED visits decreases hospital overcrowding and minimizes unnecessary ambulance runs, freeing critical emergency staff to handle true emergencies more effectively.
National Poison Data System (NPDS)
The AAPCC owns and manages a large database of information from all poison exposure and information case phone calls to all poison centers across the country. It is the only near real-time, comprehensive poisoning surveillance database in the United States. NPDS holds more than 50 million poison exposure case records, with more than 2 million new records added each year. It is also a robust and modern system – holding technical medical information that is searchable in many ways. NPDS contains exposure cases dating back to 1985. Today, information and exposure case data is continually uploaded to NPDS from all the poison centers in near “real time.” NPDS can: