May 14, 2026

Redesigning oral medicines for ease of use

Children and older adults often struggle to swallow traditional tablets and capsules. GEA's advanced processing technologies are changing this, enabling a new generation of oral dosage forms that make medicines easier to take and more likely to be taken.

This image shows an open pill bottle and small pills

Tech talk: Pharma glossary


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Adherence

Taking medicine correctly, which means the right dose, at the right time, for as long as a doctor prescribed.

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Coating

A thin outer layer – like a shell – applied to tablets. The coating makes tablets easier to swallow, mask bitter tastes, protect the medicine inside while controlling how and where it dissolves in the body.

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Compression

The industrial process of turning powder or granules into solid tablets by applying pressure.

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Extrusion

A process that pushes a wet powder mass, consisting of the medicine and special materials to make the drugs dissolve better in the body and/or release them at a controlled rate, through a die to produce spaghetti-like strands of product.

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Fluid-bed granulation

A process that turns powder into free-flowing, uniform granules by spraying a binding liquid onto particles suspended in a stream of air.

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Spheronization

A technique used to convert “extruded” particles – sometimes cylindrical or irregular – into little balls or pellets.
This image shows a person using a medical drinking straw
This image shows a woman and a pharmacist in a pharmacy

Medicines designed for diverse conditions and medical needs

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