Your meds, pre-sorted and ready to take

Every dose in its own sealed blister, labeled with the day and the time — no bottles to line up, nothing to second-guess

What compliance packaging actually is

If you take six medications, you are doing a small piece of math every morning. Compliance packaging takes that job off you. We sort your prescriptions into Dispill blister packs — one sealed blister for each dose, arranged by day of the week and time of day. Tuesday breakfast is a single bubble you push through. You either took it or you didn't, and one look at the card tells you which.

Sorted by day and time

Each blister holds everything you take at that hour, on that day. The card is labeled, so the pack tells you what to do without you having to remember.

Built for long medication lists

The more prescriptions you juggle, the more this helps. Five, ten, fifteen medications all collapse into one simple card.

A relief for caregivers

If you manage someone else's medications, the pack does the tracking for you. You can see at a glance whether a dose was taken.

Fewer missed and doubled doses

Missing a dose and taking one twice are the two ways pill bottles fail people. A sealed, dated blister makes both much harder to do.

Refills synced to one date

We line your prescriptions up so they come due together. One pack, one refill, instead of a trickle of separate pickups.

Delivered free

Your packs can come to your door at no charge, anywhere in Astoria and the surrounding Queens neighborhoods. No minimums, no delivery fee.

Why it works

  • You can see, without thinking about it, whether today's dose has been taken
  • No sorting pills into a plastic organizer at the kitchen table every Sunday
  • Each pack lists the medications inside it, so a doctor or nurse can read it at a glance
  • Packs travel well — take the card, leave the shoebox of bottles at home
  • A pharmacist rebuilds the pack whenever a prescriber changes something

Let's simplify your medication routine

Tell us what you take and we'll set up your first pack — for you, or for someone you look after.

Call the pharmacy