Police are warning the public after two men allegedly pushed a 63-year-old woman to the ground and stole hundreds of prescription pills with an estimated street value of $10,000.

Toronto police Const. Jenniferjit Sidhu said the woman filled a prescription at her pharmacy and was approached by the men at around 11 a.m. Tuesday, near the intersection of Forty First St. and Lake Shore Blvd. W. in south Etobicoke.

The woman was then pushed to the ground and robbed of her prescription drugs, police say. Sidhu said the woman “suffered minor abrasions to the top of her feet and knees, and has leg and muscle pain and stiffness” after the daylight attack.

The stolen drugs consisted of 600 tablets of the painkiller Oxycodone, 420 tablets of Oxycocet — otherwise known as Percocet, which also treats pain — and 120 tablets of Diazepam.

Sidhu said an investigation is ongoing, but that police spoke to the woman’s pharmacist after the robbery. “It seems like, whatever these drugs are, she got them there,” Sidhu said.

Toronto pharmacist Chukwu Ume, who has no connection to this incident, told the Star that, while unusual, it’s not unheard of for someone to pick up so many prescription drugs at once.

“If someone has been on opioids for a while, and a doctor has trust in them for that quantity,” then it’s not out of the question, Ume said.

A police news release on the incident noted that the stolen drugs can cause addiction, overdose or death — especially if taken by children.