The document discusses biomedical waste management. It begins by noting the rapid increase in hospitals and disposable products has led to more medical waste. Proper waste management is important for quality assurance and public health. The document then covers waste characteristics, legislation around management, categories of waste, health hazards of improper management, and strategies for proper segregation, storage, transportation, treatment and disposal of biomedical waste.
2. introduction
The last century witnessed the rapid mushrooming of
hospitals dictated by the need of the expanding
population, and the advent and acceptance of
“disposable” has made the generation of hospital waste
a significant factor in biomedical waste management.
Safe disposal of waste is very difficult
The need of proper hospital waste management system
is of prime importance and is an essential component
of quality assurance.
3. Waste characteristics
About 10-15% of health care waste is
infected waste.
Mixing of infected waste with household waste
should not be allowed.
Waste quantity
Depends on type of health care setting & services
offered.
Estimated waste generated in Indian hospitals
is 1.59-2.2 kg/bed/day.
4. Waste Management in Small Hospitals:
Trouble for Environment
Pant D.
Waste Management Lab
Institute of Biomedical and Natural Science,Dehradun
A survey was conducted in 100 hospitals present in Dehradun.
Larger amount of per day per bed waste was found among the
small hospitals(178g compared with 114g in big hospitals),
indicating unskilled waste management practices
Small hospitals do not follow the proper way for taking care of
segregation of waste generated in the hospital, and most bio-
medical wastes were collected without segregation into
infectious & non-infectious categories.
5. definition
Biomedical waste means any waste which is
generated during the diagnosis, treatment or
immunization of human beings or animals or
in research activities pertaining thereto or in
the production or testing of biological.
(Biomedical Waste Management and Handling Rules1998, India)
Biomedical waste management is sorting of medical
waste in hospital.
6. PURPOSES of waste management system
To reduce hazardous nature of waste
To reduce volume of waste
To prevent misuse or abuse of waste
To ensure occupational safety and health
To consider aesthetics
To reuse items that can be of repeat utility
7. PURPOSES CONTD…
To recycle waste where possible for another
utility item
Maintain order and cleanliness in hospital
Maintain healthy environment
Prevent spread of infectious diseases
Project good impression of management
Attract more clientele
8. Sources-health care waste
Government and Private hospitals
Nursing homes
Physician’s office/clinics
Dispensaries
Primary Health Centres
Medical research and training establishments
Mortuaries
9. Legislative framework
Keeping In view inappropriate Biomedical
waste management, the Ministry of
Environment & Forests notified the
“Biomedical Waste(management and
handling) Rules,1998” in July,1998.
10. Bio Medical Waste(Management and
Handling)Rules,1998
Objective:
to stop the indiscriminate disposal of hospital waste/
bio-medical waste &
ensure that such waste is handled without any
adverse effect on the human health and environment
11. Bio Medical(Management and Handling)Rules
Sources of waste includes:
Waste generated by the health care facilities
Research facilities
Laboratories
Biomedical waste in hospitals:
85% are non-infectious/ non-hazardous
10% are infectious
5% are hazardous
12. Legislative framework
Basic principles
Segregation of waste at the health facility level.
Processing and storage for terminal disposal.
Bio-medical waste shall not be mixed with other
wastes.
Bio-medical waste shall be segregated into
containers/ bags at the point of generation in
accordance with BMW Rules 1998 prior to its storage,
transportation, treatment and disposal.
13. Basic principles
Color coding to support segregation at source
Untreated bio-medical waste not to be stored beyond
a period of 48 hours.
Transport waste safely to pick up site.
Identify destination for each type of waste and
ensure safe disposal.
Every authorised person shall maintain records
related to any form of handling of biomedical waste.
14. Categories of bio-medical waste
Categories Waste Type
Category-1 Human anatomical waste
Category-2 Animal waste
Category-3 Microbiology & Biotechnology waste
Category-4 Sharps
Category-5 Discarded medicines & cytotoxic
waste
15. Categories Waste Type
Category-6 Solid waste
Category-7 Plastics and disposables
Category-8 Liquid waste
Category-9 Incinerator ash
Category-10 Chemical waste
16. NORMS OF COLOUR CODING CONTAINERS
Color
coding
Type of
container
Waste
category
Treatment options
Yellow Plastic bag Cat. 1, 2, 3 & 6 Incineration/ deep burial
Blue Plastic bag/
puncture proof
containers
Cat. 4, 7 Autoclaving/ microwaving/
chemical treatment &
destruction/ shredding
Black Plastic bag Cat. 5, 9, 10 Disposal in secured landfill
Note:
Waste collection bags for waste types needing incineration shall not be made
of chlorinated plastics.
17. CLASSIFICATION OF BIOMEDICAL WASTE
INFECTIOUS WASTE:
Suspected to contain pathogens.
E.g. lab cultures, wastes from isolation wards,
tissues, materials, equipment that have been in
contact with infected patients, excreta.
23. WASTES WITH HIGH CONTENT OF
SOLVENTS:
Batteries, broken thermometers, BP gauges, etc.
24. RADIOACTIVE WASTE CONTAINING
RADIOACTIVE SUBSTANCES :
Unused liquids from radiotherapy Lab, research
contaminated glassware, packages and
absorbent paper, patients tested or treated.
25. Health hazards
HEALTH HAZARDS ASSOCIATED WITH POOR BMWM
Hospital acquired infections(HAI)/ Nosocomial infections
Blood borne diseases like Hep.B, Hep.C, HIV.
Epidemics
Cancer
Physical injury
26. HEALTH HAZARDS Contd…
Injury from sharps to staff and waste handlers associated with
the health care establishment.
Risk of infection outside the hospital for waste
handlers/scavengers and eventually general public.
Occupational risk associated with hazardous chemicals, drugs
etc.
Unauthorised repackaging and sale of disposable items and
unused / date expired drugs
27. Health hazards
Main risk groups:
Medical doctors
Nurses
Health care auxiliaries & hospital
maintenance personnel
Patients & Visitors
Workers coming in contact with bio-medical
waste
28. WHAT IS BIOSAFETY?
Biosafety is essentially a preventive concept and
consists of wide variety of safety precautions that are
to be undertaken, either singly or in combination,
depending on the type of hazard by all medical,
nursing & paramedical workers as well as by patients,
attendants, ancillary staff & administrators in a
hospital.
29. Biosafety levels
Biosafety Level 1
Work involving well characterized agents not known to
cause disease in healthy adult humans & of minimal
potential hazard to lab. personnel and the
environment.
Minimal precautions, most likely involving gloves and
some sort of facial protection.
30. Biosafety Level 2
Work involving agents of moderate potential hazard
to personnel & the environment.
Restricted access, training on the hazards of
infectious agents, sterilization of waste, standard
sharps handling etc.
Immunization, if available.
31. Biosafety Level 3
Clinical, diagnostic, teaching, research or production
facilities in which work is done with indigenous or
exotic agents which may cause serious or potentially
lethal disease as a result of exposure by the inhalation
route.
Higher level of training & supervision, biological safety
cabinets, two-door airlock system, immunization
precautions
32. Biosafety Level 4
Work with dangerous & exotic agents which pose a high
individual risk of aerosol-transmitted lab. infections &
life-threatening disease. Handled until sufficient data
are obtained to confirm work with them.
35. Waste assessment strategy
Main objectives:
Assessing type & amount of waste
Planning disposal strategies
Gather information by:
A walk through the hospital
Interviewing workers
Examining records
36. Waste recycling strategy
Main objectives:
Prolonging life of material
Helping in cost saving & waste volume
reduction
Ensuring that reusables are properly sterilized
37. Hospital waste disposal
Main objectives:
Disposing waste in most hygienic & cost
effective manner.
Using methods that minimize risk to environment.
38. Elements of biomedical
waste management
1) Waste management team
2) Waste management plan
3) Training on biomedical waste management
4) Waste segregation
5) Waste collection
6) Waste storage
7) Transportation
8) Treatment
9) Disposal
39. waste management team
Head of hospital
forms
Waste management team
develop
Waste management plan(WMP)
40. waste management team
The staff typically involves:
Head of hospital(Chairperson)
Heads of hospital departments
Infection control officer/nurse
Chief pharmacist
Matron or senior nursing officer
Hospital manager/administrator
Hospital engineer/technician
41. waste management team
A Waste management officer(WMO) is
also appointed
WMO,s responsibilities:
Waste management plan formulation
Subsequent day-to-day operation
Monitoring of waste disposal system
Produces a draft
42. waste management team
The draft address following issues:
Present situation regarding waste management
Quantities of waste generated, the points of generation,
the type of waste at each point
Possibilities for waste minimization, reuse &recycling
Waste segregation, on-site handling, transport &
storage practices
Identification & evaluation of waste treatment/disposal
options
Training
Estimation of costs relating to BMWM
Strategy for implementation of plan
43. Waste management
plan (wmp)
Comprises of the complete outline of waste
management process
WMP is reviewed annually
Periodic auditing & evaluation of waste
management methods is performed
44. Training on biomedical
waste management
Overall aim of training:
To develop awareness of health, safety and
environmental issues relating to health care
waste.
Roles & responsibilities of health care
personnel in overall management program should be
highlighted.
45. Training on biomedical
waste management
Four main categories for which separate
training activities are designed:
1. Hospital managers & administrative staff
2. Medical doctors
3. Nurses & assistant nurses
4. Cleaners, porters, auxiliary
staff &waste handlers
46. Training on biomedical
waste management
Staff education programs
Information given on:
All aspects of health care waste policy
Role & responsibilities of each hospital staff
member.
Relevant technical instructions
Adequate education & training of
health personnel about handling waste
47. Waste segregation
Done at the source of waste generation
Responsibility of generator of waste.
segregation as per categories
applicable.
48. Waste collection
Done by sanitary worker daily
Sharp items collected together safely in
puncture-proof plastic container and tightly sealed
49. Waste collection contd..
• To discourage abuse, containers should be tamper-
proof (difficult to open or break)and needles and
syringes should be rendered unusable.
• Where plastic or metal containers are unavailable or
too costly, containers made of dense cardboard are
recommended (WHO, 1997);
50. Collection times
• Wards > Every morning
• Operation theatre (OT)> Each operation / surgical
procedure
• OPD, ICU, Emergency, Laboratories > Each shift
• Pharmacy > Once a day
• Administrative unit and central store> Once a day
• Surrounding premises and garden> Once a day
• Dialysis unit> Each procedure
• Radiation unit> Each procedure
51. waste storage
Storage facility should be located within
hospital premises.
It should have sufficient capacity.
Radioactive waste must be stored separately.
Untreated biomedical waste not to be kept
beyond 48 hrs.
Permission required for more than 48 hrs.
Take measures for protecting human health &
environment.
52. Waste transportation
Points to be remembered:
Before taking the bags it should be tied and labelled.
Waste handlers should not touch any other articles.
A covered cart with a biohazard symbol to carry the
waste to the central area of collection.
53. SAFETY MEASURES FOR CLEANING AND
TRANSPORTATION STAFF:
• Display of illustrated notices.
• Issuance of protective gears.
• Provision of hand washing articles
• Provision of wash area.
• Sterilisation of all equipment and issue of only properly
sterilised equipment and tool to the medical personnel.
• Regular medical check-up.
• Provision of disinfectant of the right quality.
54. Waste treatment
and disposal
Available Treatment and Disposal Methods
Chemical Technology
Thermal Technology
Autoclave
Hydroclave
Incinerator
Microwave
Screw feed
Mechanical Technology
Compaction
Grinding/ Shredding
Pulverization
Inertization
55. Waste treatment and
disposal
Biological Method
Plasma torch Technology
Deep burial
Land filling
Open dumps
Sanitary land fill
Worm composting
56. Waste treatmenand disposal
Chemical Technology
It uses chemicals to destroy pathogenic organisms
from any inanimate objects
Mostly suitable for liquids- blood, urine etc.
Solid- microbiological cultures, sharps.
58. Hydroclave
Steam sterilization technology.
Steam is used as indirect heating source
allowing total dehydration of waste material.
Holding time for waste is 15 minutes at 132°C
or 30 minutes at 121°C.
Performs sterilization faster , greater heat
penetrance.
59. Incinerator
High heat, dry oxidation process of
burning combustible solids at very high
temperature in a furnace.
Reduces waste volume and weight
Not for pressurized containers, reactive
chemicals, silver mercury cadmium
waste
60. Microwave
Low heat system.
Uses microwaves to heat up the waste material
from inside.
Electromagnetic waves that lie between 300 to
300,000 MHz range in the electromagnetic
radiation spectrum.
The heat produced at
95 - 100°C for a holding
period of 25 minutes.
Efficacy checked by
bacteriological, virological test
61. Screw feed technology
Waste shredded & heated in a rotary auger.
Waste reduced by 80% in volume & by 20-35% in
weight.
Used for treatment of infectious waste & sharps.
Not suitable for:
Pathological waste
Cytotoxic waste
Radioactive waste
62. Mechanical Technology
Compaction
Compacting is carried out by a hydraulic ram
against a hard surface.
Grinding / Shredding
Waste material is broken down into smaller
particles under negative pressure to avoid any
spillage outside the chamber.
COMPACTION SHREDDING
63. Pulverization
Waste is mixed with large volume of water
and bleach solution.
1. Waste is torn to shreds
2. Fed to an ultra high speed hammer
mill with large spin blades.
3.Pulverize the matter into small, safe particles
64. Inertization
Process of mixing waste with other substance like
cement, lime & water.
Risk of toxic substances migrating into surface
water or ground water is minimum.
Proportion of mixture:-
Pharmaceutical waste - 65%
Lime - 15%
Cement - 15%
Water - 5%
Homogenous mass formed into cubes or pellets.
65. Irradiation Technology
Wastes exposed to ultraviolet or ionizing radiation in
an enclosed chamber.
Require post shredding to render the waste
unrecognizable.
Biological Processes
Use biological enzymes for treating medical waste.
Not only decontaminate the waste but also cause
the destruction of all the organic constituents.
66. Plasma torch Technology
Plasma cutting is a process used to cut steel
& other metals or sometimes other materials
of different thickness using a plasma torch.
Deep burial
Waste(Cat. 1, 3& 6) is disposed into a deep
pit and covered with thick layer of earth
ensuring biodegradation.
PLASMA TORCH
BURIAL PITS
67. Land filling
Disposal of residual solid wastes on land.
2 types:
Open dumps
Health care waste should not be
deposited on or around open dumps.
Sanitary land fill
Specially constructed for
disposal of non-biodegradable
Infectious hospital waste.
68. Worm composting
Biodegradable general waste is disposed into
rectangular pit bound by brick wall where
earthworms are introduced to convert waste
into useful agricultural compost.
69. The study of bacterial flora of different types in
hospital waste: evaluation of waste treatment at
AIIMS Hospital, New Delhi
Saini S, Das BK, Kapil A, Naqarajan SS, Sarma RK.
Department of Pediatrics, AIIMS New Delhi 2004 Dec
Samples were collected from different types of waste at the
hospital, at different time intervals, for microbiological
evaluation.
The microbial flora isolated from infectious waste and general
waste from the hospital are similar.
70. Contd…..
The samples from general waste in this study reveal many types
of pathogens.
The bacteria present in the waste initially was low in quantity,
but they replicated rapidly over time so that significant numbers
were detected by 24 hours, due to environmental factors which
were favourable for growth during this period.
This study strongly suggests that waste should be removed from
the hospital within 24 hours of its generation to prevent
environmental contamination caused by any accidental spillage
of waste.
General waste generated in the hospital should be treated similar
to infectious waste, as it can be equally hazardous.
71. BIOMEDICAL WASTE MANAGEMENT
AT AIIMS
AIIMS practices BMW disposal as per guidelines of
Biomedical waste(management and
handling)Rules,1998 as notified under the environment
protection act by the Ministry of Environment and
Forests(GOI)
72. Segregation of waste
At AIIMS, three color coded bags are used:
Yellow
Black
Blue
73. Transportation
– Waste collected twice a day 10am-11am & 6:30pm-
7:30pm by waste collection vans.
– Waste transported in trolleys within hospital.
– Infected waste collected in polythene bags &
transported to BMW treatment facility.
74. At AIIMS we have onsite facility to treat infective
and plastic waste.
2 Double-chambered oil fired incinerators with 230 kg
capacity each. Temperature in the primary chamber is 7500-
850OC.
Combustion in air starved atmosphere. Initially burnt in the
presence of abundant oxygen in the secondary chamber
where the temperature
goes up to 1000oc – 11000c.
75. Treatment
• The resultant effluent is passed through a stream of
water where most of the tar products are absorbed
and relatively unpolluted CO2 and steam are ejected.
• An Autoclave of 100 kg capacity to disinfect plastic
wastes.
• The autoclaved plastics are subjected to further mass
reduction by a shredder.
76. Final disposal
Black bags
Disposed along with other municipal waste.
Yellow bags
Incinerated & resultant ash collected to be
used in land fills.
Blue bags
Autoclaved, shredded & finally dispensed.
77. STAFF SAFETY CONSIDERATIONS
To ensure the safety of personnel involved in bio
medical waste treatment and disposal AIIMS follows
certain policies and guidelines:
• There are dedicated trolleys for transporting waste
within the hospital
• All workers involved in the work are aware of the
hazardous nature of the work.
• The workers are provided with all protective
equipment
• All workers are immunized against tetanus and
hepatitis B.
78. Biomedical waste management: incineration vs.
environmental safety.
Gautam V, Thapar R, Sharma M.
Department of Medical Microbiology, PGIMER, Chandigarh.
Non-incineration treatment technologies are a growing and
developing field. Most medical waste is incinerated. The burning of
solid and medical waste creates many problems.
Incinerators emit toxic air pollutants and toxic ash residues that are
the major source of dioxins in the environment. International
Agency for Research on Cancer, an arm of WHO, acknowledged
dioxins cancer causing potential and classified it as a human
carcinogen.
Development of waste management policies, careful waste
segregation and training programs, as well as attention to materials
purchased, are essential in minimizing the environmental and
health impacts of any technology.
79. Role of nurses and nursing
ICN Position:
All nurses’ duty –eliminating negative impact of
medical waste
ICN supports initiatives including:
Decisions favoring recycled products
Proper waste segregation
Waste treatment choices minimizing toxic
disinfectants & sterilants
Waste disposal choices reducing
incineration to maximum
Patient education
80. Nursing organizations need to:
Facilitate nurses’ access to continuing
education programmes.
Involve direct care nurses in decision-making.
Advocate for safe waste disposal
mechanisms.
Develop coalitions with other professions.
Define & regulate nursing competencies.
81. Biomedical waste
management issues
Implementation of bio-medical waste
regulation-unsatisfactory
Lack of segregation practices
Incorrect methods of waste disposal
Dumping of waste in river and sea
82. Recycling of disposables without even
being washed
Using same wheel barrow for all categories
of waste
Trolley movement around patient care units
No mechanism for ensuring waste treatment
within prescribed time limits
No proper training of
employees in some hospitals
83. SUMMARY
Biomedical waste(BMW) are potentially dangerous. Sorting of
medical wastes at the site where it is generated is a vital step. Other
forms of waste should not be mixed with biomedical waste as different
rules apply to the treatment of different types of waste. It must be
properly managed to protect the general public, specifically healthcare
and sanitation workers who are regularly exposed to biomedical waste
as an occupational hazard.
Hence, collection and disposal of waste in the proper manner is of
great importance as it can decrease directly and indirectly health risk to
people, and damage to flora, fauna and the environment (Centres for
Disease Control and Prevention, 2001).
84. CONCLUSION
We need innovative and radical measures to clean up
the distressing picture of lack of civic concern on the
part of hospitals and slackness in government
implementation of bare minimum of rules, as waste
generation particularly biomedical waste imposes
increasing direct and indirect costs on society.
This is the time to pause and ponder over the matter
because evidence is there for us to understand that
hospital waste management is of great concern.
85. references
• Park K.;Park’s textbook of preventive and social
medicine;20th edition;2009;p 694-699.
• Sood Seema; Microbiology for Nurses; 2nd Edition; p
80-87.
• Hospital infection control manual at AIIMS
• www.google.co.in
• www.pubmed.gov
• www.who.int