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Pharmaceutical look is changing

By NEWS SYSTEM
Published: April 1st, 2008
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August Faller KG will be showcasing packaging solutions for the pharmaceutical industry at the booth of the COPACO Group. Attention will focus on four of the most important requirements that pharmaceutical packaging now has to meet.

The company is also the first pharmaceutical packaging specialist to launch a finishing brand: “Faller Senses”. It is the COPACO member’s response to the growing demand for packaging design techniques for building pharmaceutical brands. Faller is also presenting its pharma-compliant finishing portfolio In a new catalog that covers multisensory finishes for folding cartons, adhesive labels and package inserts, and combination products.

Not only the look of pharmaceutical packages is changing, but also their design requirements. With developments including the PacketPack, Faller Wallet and Faller WalletPlus, Faller is demonstrating its talent for creating patient-friendly packaging that supports therapeutic success. Solutions of this kind have already enabled Faller to win the ProCarton Award three times in a row.

At Interpack, Faller will also highlight efficient, GMP-validated process management for producing and assembling combination products as one of its areas of expertise. The COPACO member will exhibit its supplement solutions: folding cartons with integrated inserts or patient-friendly outserts, which Faller supplies as required prefolded, as flat sheets or in standard or special versions printed in up to six colors. Other specialties include labels with sequential bar codes on folding cartons and wallets with calendar labels.

Faller has also extended its competence in preventing packages from being forged, for instance with its multistage Medicaptrotex® security system. As a new security feature, Faller offers inline printing of hidden images: special software is used to integrate motifs in the color separations. The pixels and lines are altered to make the added information invisible to the naked eye; a special decoding sheet must be laid on top to reveal the hidden image.

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