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CATEGORIZING
  BIOMEDICAL AND
HEALTHCARE WASTES




          Dr. Prashant Mehta
          Assistant Professor,
  National Law University, Jodhpur
Email: prashantmehta1@rediffmail.com
INTRODUCTION


DEFINITION
• Healthcare waste includes all the waste generated by
   healthcare establishments (hospitals and Dispensaries),
   Research facilities, and diagnostic laboratories besides
   healthcare activities like immunizations, diagnostic
   tests, medical treatments procedures, and laboratory
   examinations. In addition, it includes the waste
   originating from "minor" or "scattered" sources such as
   that produced in the course of healthcare undertaken in
   the home (dialysis, insulin injections, etc.).

•   Between 75% - 80% of the waste produced by
    healthcare providers is non-risk or "general" healthcare
    waste which is comparable to domestic waste. The
    remaining 20% of wastes are considered hazardous
    disposed of materials that may be of infectious nature
    like organs, toxic materials, or radioactive wastes. The
    wastes and by products and are produced cover a
    diverse range of materials.
Categories of Healthcare Wastes
Infectious Wastes


Infectious waste is suspected to contain pathogens (bacteria,
viruses, parasites, or fungi) in sufficient concentration or quantity to
cause disease in susceptible hosts. This category includes:

 – Waste suspected to contain pathogens e.g. laboratory cultures;
   waste from isolation wards; tissues (swabs), materials, or
   equipment that have been in contact with infected patients;
   excreta.
 – Waste from surgery and autopsies on patients with infectious
   diseases (e.g. tissues, and materials or equipment that have
   been in contact with blood or other body fluids).
 – Waste from infected patients in isolation wards (e.g. excreta,
   dressings from infected or surgical wounds, clothes heavily
   soiled with human blood or other body fluids).
 – Waste that has been in contact with infected patients
   undergoing haemodialysis (e.g. dialysis equipment such as
   tubing and filters, disposable towels, gowns, aprons, gloves,
   and laboratory coats).
 – Any other instruments or materials that have been in contact
   with infected persons or animals.
 – Discarded diagnostic samples etc.
Pathological Wastes


•   Pathological waste consists of human tissues, organs, body parts, human fetuses,
    body fluids. Within this category, recognizable human or animal body parts are
    also called anatomical waste. This category should be considered as a subcategory
    of infectious waste, even though it may also include healthy body parts.

•   Anatomic - recognizable body parts and animal carcasses. Infectious and anatomic
    wastes together represent the nearly 15% of the hazardous waste of the total
    waste generated from healthcare activities.
Sharps


•   Sharps are items that could cause cuts or puncture wounds,
    including needles, hypodermic needles, scalpel and other blades,
    knives, infusion sets, saws, broken glass, and nails. Whether or not
    they are infected, such items are usually considered as highly
    hazardous healthcare waste.

•   Sharps represent about 1% of the total waste from healthcare
    activities.

•   Throughout the world every year an estimated 2,500 million
    injections are administered and all needles and syringes are not
    properly disposed of giving an opportunities for reuse, thus it results
    in risk for injury and infection like hepatitis B, hepatitis C and HIV
    infections. Many of these infections could be avoided if syringes
    were disposed of safely.

•   In developing countries, additional hazards occur from scavenging
    on waste disposal sites and manual sorting of the waste
    recuperated at the back doors of healthcare establishments. These
    practices are common in many regions of the world. The waste
    handlers are at immediate risk of needle-stick injuries and other
    exposures to toxic or infectious materials.
Geno-Toxic Wastes

•   Geno-toxic waste is highly hazardous and may have mutagenic, terato-genic, or carcinogenic
    properties. It raises serious safety problems, both inside hospitals and after disposal.
    Genotoxic waste may include certain cytostatic drugs used in cancer treatment , vomitus,
    urine, or faeces from patients treated with cytostatic drugs, chemicals, and radioactive
    material.




•   Cyto-toxic (or antineoplastic) drugs are most often used in specialized departments such as
    oncology and radiotherapy units to treat cancers. The principal substances in this category,
    have the ability to kill or stop the growth of certain living cells and are used in chemotherapy
    of cancer. They play an important role in the therapy of various neoplastic conditions but are
    also finding wider application as immunosuppressive agents in organ transplantation and in
    treating various diseases with an immunological basis.
Pharmaceutical Wastes


•   Pharmaceuticals – Expired or no longer needed, unused, and contaminated drugs.
    The drugs themselves (sometimes toxic and powerful chemicals) or their
    metabolites, vaccines and sera. Chemicals and pharmaceuticals amount to about
    nearly 03% of waste from healthcare activities.
Chemical Wastes

•   Chemical waste consists of discarded solid, liquid, and gaseous chemicals, for example from
    diagnostic and experimental work and from cleaning, housekeeping, and disinfecting
    procedures. Chemical waste from health care may be hazardous or non-hazardous consists of
    chemicals with none of the above properties, such as sugars, amino acids, and certain organic
    and inorganic salts); in the context of protecting health, it is considered to be hazardous if it has
    at least one of the following properties: toxic; corrosive (e.g. acids of pH < 2 and bases of pH >
    12); inflammable; reactive (explosive, water- reactive, shock- sensitive); genotoxic (e.g.
    cytostatic drugs) used most commonly in maintenance of healthcare centres and hospitals.
Chemical Waste

•   Formaldehyde - Formaldehyde is a significant source of chemical waste in hospitals. It is used
    to clean and disinfect equipment (e.g. haemodialysis or surgical equipment), preserve
    specimens, disinfect liquid infectious waste, used in pathology, autopsy, dialysis, embalming,
    and nursing units.
•   Photographic Chemicals - Photographic fixing and developing solutions are used in X-ray
    departments. The fixer usually contains 5-10% hydroquinone, 1-5% potassium hydroxide, and
    less than 1% silver. The developer contains approximately 45% glutaraldehyde. Acetic acid is
    used in both stop baths and fixer solutions.
•   Solvents - Wastes containing solvents are generated in various departments of a hospital,
    including pathology and histology laboratories and engineering departments. Solvents used in
    hospitals include halogenated compounds, such as methylene chloride, chloroform,
    trichloroethylene, and refrigerants, and non-halogenated compounds such as xylene,
    methanol, acetone, isopropanol, toluene, ethyl acetate, and acetonitrile.
•   Organic Chemicals Waste generated in HealthCare Facilities Include: disinfecting, cleaning
    solutions such as phenol-based chemicals used for scrubbing floors, perchlorethylene used in
    workshops and laundries; oils such as vacuum-pump oils, used engine oil from vehicles
    (particularly if there is a vehicle service station on the hospital premises); insecticides,
    rodenticides.
•   Inorganic Chemicals - Waste inorganic chemicals consist mainly of acids and alkalis (e.g.
    sulfuric, hydrochloric, nitric, and chromic acids, sodium hydroxide and ammonia solutions).
    They also include oxidants, such as potassium permanganate (KMnO4 ) and potassium
    dichromate (K 2Cr2O7), and reducing agents, such as sodium bisulfite (NaHSO3) and sodium
    sulfite (Na2SO3).
Heavy Metal Waste


•   Wastes with a high heavy-metal content represent a subcategory of
    hazardous chemical waste, and are usually highly toxic.
•   Mercury wastes are typically generated by spillage from broken clinical
    equipment but their volume is decreasing with the substitution of
    solid-state electronic sensing instruments (thermometers, blood-
    pressure gauges, etc.). Residues from dentistry have a high mercury
    content.
•   Cadmium waste comes mainly from discarded batteries.
•   Lead Waste comes from certain "reinforced wood panels“ are still
    used in radiation proofing of X-ray and diagnostic departments.
•   Arsenic Waste - A number of drugs contain arsenic, but these are
    treated here as pharmaceutical waste.

•   Healthcare waste is a reservoir of potentially harmful micro-organisms
    which can infect hospital patients, healthcare workers and the general
    public. Wastes and by-products can also cause injuries, for example
    radiation burns or sharps-inflicted injuries; poisoning and pollution,
    whether through the release of pharmaceutical products, in particular,
    antibiotics and cytotoxic drugs, through the waste water or by toxic
    elements or compounds such as mercury or dioxins.
Pressurized Containers


•   Many types of gas are used in health care, and are often stored in
    pressurized cylinders, cartridges, and aerosol cans. Whether inert or
    potentially harmful, gases in pressurized containers should always be
    handled with care; containers may explode if incinerated or accidentally
    punctured. The main types of gases used in hospitals are:

•   Anaesthetic gases: nitrous oxide, volatile halogenated hydrocarbons (such
    as halothane, isoflurane, and enflurane), which have largely replaced ether
    and chloroform. These are used in hospital operating theatres, during
    childbirth in maternity hospitals, in ambulances, in general hospital wards
    during painful procedures, in dentistry, for sedation, etc.
•   Ethylene oxide - Applications - for sterilization of surgical equipment and
    medical devices, in central supply areas, and, at times, in operating rooms.
•   Oxygen - Stored in bulk tank or cylinders, in gaseous or liquid form, or
    supplied by central piping. Application - inhalation supply for patients.
•   Compressed air - Applications - in laboratory work, inhalation therapy
    equipment, maintenance equipment, and environmental control systems.
Radioactive Wastes



•   The use of radiation sources in medical and other applications is widespread throughout the
    world. Occasionally, the public is exposed to radioactive waste, usually originating from
    radiotherapy treatments, that has not been properly disposed of. With new methods of
    treatment the threat to such wastes will grow exponentially
•   Immunisation is vital to prevent disease and save lives. However, large scale vaccination
    programs can create enormous amounts of waste. Often, waste is open burned or donors
    build cheap small scale incinerators which are used to burn syringes from the vaccination
    program and other medical waste after the vaccination program is over, perpetuating the
    problem of dioxin pollution. In June 2000, six children were diagnosed with a mild form of
    smallpox (vaccinia virus) after having played with glass ampoules containing expired smallpox
    vaccine at a garbage dump in Vladivostok (Russia). Although the infections were not life-
    threatening, the vaccine ampoules should have been treated before being discarded.
Components of Bio-Medical Wastes


•   Human Anatomical Waste (tissues, organs, body parts etc.)
•   Animal       Waste      (as     above,      generated       during
    research/experimentation, from veterinary hospitals etc.)
•   Microbiology and biotechnology waste, such as, laboratory
    cultures, micro-organisms, human and animal cell cultures, toxins
    etc.
•   Waste sharps, such as, hypodermic needles, syringes, scalpels,
    broken glass etc.
•   Discarded medicines and cyto-toxic drugs
•   Soiled waste, such as dressing, bandages, plaster casts, material
    contaminated with blood etc.
•   Solid waste (disposable items like tubes, catheters etc. excluding
    sharps)
•   Liquid waste generated from any of the infected areas
•   Incineration Ash
•   Chemical Waste
Environmental Concerns


•   Spread of infection and disease through
    vectors (fly, mosquito, insects etc.) which
    affect the in-house as well as surrounding
    population.
•   Spread of infection through contact / injury
    among medical/non-medical personnel and
    sweepers / rag pickers, especially from the
    sharps (needles, blades etc).
•   Spread of infection through unauthorised
    recycling of disposable items such as
    hypodermic needles, tubes, blades, bottles etc.
•   Reaction due to use of discarded medicines.
•   Toxic emissions from defective / inefficient
    incinerators.
•   Indiscriminate disposal of incinerator
    ash / residues.
Categorizing anddisposing healthcare wastes

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Categorizing anddisposing healthcare wastes

  • 1. CATEGORIZING BIOMEDICAL AND HEALTHCARE WASTES Dr. Prashant Mehta Assistant Professor, National Law University, Jodhpur Email: prashantmehta1@rediffmail.com
  • 2. INTRODUCTION DEFINITION • Healthcare waste includes all the waste generated by healthcare establishments (hospitals and Dispensaries), Research facilities, and diagnostic laboratories besides healthcare activities like immunizations, diagnostic tests, medical treatments procedures, and laboratory examinations. In addition, it includes the waste originating from "minor" or "scattered" sources such as that produced in the course of healthcare undertaken in the home (dialysis, insulin injections, etc.). • Between 75% - 80% of the waste produced by healthcare providers is non-risk or "general" healthcare waste which is comparable to domestic waste. The remaining 20% of wastes are considered hazardous disposed of materials that may be of infectious nature like organs, toxic materials, or radioactive wastes. The wastes and by products and are produced cover a diverse range of materials.
  • 4. Infectious Wastes Infectious waste is suspected to contain pathogens (bacteria, viruses, parasites, or fungi) in sufficient concentration or quantity to cause disease in susceptible hosts. This category includes: – Waste suspected to contain pathogens e.g. laboratory cultures; waste from isolation wards; tissues (swabs), materials, or equipment that have been in contact with infected patients; excreta. – Waste from surgery and autopsies on patients with infectious diseases (e.g. tissues, and materials or equipment that have been in contact with blood or other body fluids). – Waste from infected patients in isolation wards (e.g. excreta, dressings from infected or surgical wounds, clothes heavily soiled with human blood or other body fluids). – Waste that has been in contact with infected patients undergoing haemodialysis (e.g. dialysis equipment such as tubing and filters, disposable towels, gowns, aprons, gloves, and laboratory coats). – Any other instruments or materials that have been in contact with infected persons or animals. – Discarded diagnostic samples etc.
  • 5. Pathological Wastes • Pathological waste consists of human tissues, organs, body parts, human fetuses, body fluids. Within this category, recognizable human or animal body parts are also called anatomical waste. This category should be considered as a subcategory of infectious waste, even though it may also include healthy body parts. • Anatomic - recognizable body parts and animal carcasses. Infectious and anatomic wastes together represent the nearly 15% of the hazardous waste of the total waste generated from healthcare activities.
  • 6. Sharps • Sharps are items that could cause cuts or puncture wounds, including needles, hypodermic needles, scalpel and other blades, knives, infusion sets, saws, broken glass, and nails. Whether or not they are infected, such items are usually considered as highly hazardous healthcare waste. • Sharps represent about 1% of the total waste from healthcare activities. • Throughout the world every year an estimated 2,500 million injections are administered and all needles and syringes are not properly disposed of giving an opportunities for reuse, thus it results in risk for injury and infection like hepatitis B, hepatitis C and HIV infections. Many of these infections could be avoided if syringes were disposed of safely. • In developing countries, additional hazards occur from scavenging on waste disposal sites and manual sorting of the waste recuperated at the back doors of healthcare establishments. These practices are common in many regions of the world. The waste handlers are at immediate risk of needle-stick injuries and other exposures to toxic or infectious materials.
  • 7. Geno-Toxic Wastes • Geno-toxic waste is highly hazardous and may have mutagenic, terato-genic, or carcinogenic properties. It raises serious safety problems, both inside hospitals and after disposal. Genotoxic waste may include certain cytostatic drugs used in cancer treatment , vomitus, urine, or faeces from patients treated with cytostatic drugs, chemicals, and radioactive material. • Cyto-toxic (or antineoplastic) drugs are most often used in specialized departments such as oncology and radiotherapy units to treat cancers. The principal substances in this category, have the ability to kill or stop the growth of certain living cells and are used in chemotherapy of cancer. They play an important role in the therapy of various neoplastic conditions but are also finding wider application as immunosuppressive agents in organ transplantation and in treating various diseases with an immunological basis.
  • 8. Pharmaceutical Wastes • Pharmaceuticals – Expired or no longer needed, unused, and contaminated drugs. The drugs themselves (sometimes toxic and powerful chemicals) or their metabolites, vaccines and sera. Chemicals and pharmaceuticals amount to about nearly 03% of waste from healthcare activities.
  • 9. Chemical Wastes • Chemical waste consists of discarded solid, liquid, and gaseous chemicals, for example from diagnostic and experimental work and from cleaning, housekeeping, and disinfecting procedures. Chemical waste from health care may be hazardous or non-hazardous consists of chemicals with none of the above properties, such as sugars, amino acids, and certain organic and inorganic salts); in the context of protecting health, it is considered to be hazardous if it has at least one of the following properties: toxic; corrosive (e.g. acids of pH < 2 and bases of pH > 12); inflammable; reactive (explosive, water- reactive, shock- sensitive); genotoxic (e.g. cytostatic drugs) used most commonly in maintenance of healthcare centres and hospitals.
  • 10. Chemical Waste • Formaldehyde - Formaldehyde is a significant source of chemical waste in hospitals. It is used to clean and disinfect equipment (e.g. haemodialysis or surgical equipment), preserve specimens, disinfect liquid infectious waste, used in pathology, autopsy, dialysis, embalming, and nursing units. • Photographic Chemicals - Photographic fixing and developing solutions are used in X-ray departments. The fixer usually contains 5-10% hydroquinone, 1-5% potassium hydroxide, and less than 1% silver. The developer contains approximately 45% glutaraldehyde. Acetic acid is used in both stop baths and fixer solutions. • Solvents - Wastes containing solvents are generated in various departments of a hospital, including pathology and histology laboratories and engineering departments. Solvents used in hospitals include halogenated compounds, such as methylene chloride, chloroform, trichloroethylene, and refrigerants, and non-halogenated compounds such as xylene, methanol, acetone, isopropanol, toluene, ethyl acetate, and acetonitrile. • Organic Chemicals Waste generated in HealthCare Facilities Include: disinfecting, cleaning solutions such as phenol-based chemicals used for scrubbing floors, perchlorethylene used in workshops and laundries; oils such as vacuum-pump oils, used engine oil from vehicles (particularly if there is a vehicle service station on the hospital premises); insecticides, rodenticides. • Inorganic Chemicals - Waste inorganic chemicals consist mainly of acids and alkalis (e.g. sulfuric, hydrochloric, nitric, and chromic acids, sodium hydroxide and ammonia solutions). They also include oxidants, such as potassium permanganate (KMnO4 ) and potassium dichromate (K 2Cr2O7), and reducing agents, such as sodium bisulfite (NaHSO3) and sodium sulfite (Na2SO3).
  • 11. Heavy Metal Waste • Wastes with a high heavy-metal content represent a subcategory of hazardous chemical waste, and are usually highly toxic. • Mercury wastes are typically generated by spillage from broken clinical equipment but their volume is decreasing with the substitution of solid-state electronic sensing instruments (thermometers, blood- pressure gauges, etc.). Residues from dentistry have a high mercury content. • Cadmium waste comes mainly from discarded batteries. • Lead Waste comes from certain "reinforced wood panels“ are still used in radiation proofing of X-ray and diagnostic departments. • Arsenic Waste - A number of drugs contain arsenic, but these are treated here as pharmaceutical waste. • Healthcare waste is a reservoir of potentially harmful micro-organisms which can infect hospital patients, healthcare workers and the general public. Wastes and by-products can also cause injuries, for example radiation burns or sharps-inflicted injuries; poisoning and pollution, whether through the release of pharmaceutical products, in particular, antibiotics and cytotoxic drugs, through the waste water or by toxic elements or compounds such as mercury or dioxins.
  • 12. Pressurized Containers • Many types of gas are used in health care, and are often stored in pressurized cylinders, cartridges, and aerosol cans. Whether inert or potentially harmful, gases in pressurized containers should always be handled with care; containers may explode if incinerated or accidentally punctured. The main types of gases used in hospitals are: • Anaesthetic gases: nitrous oxide, volatile halogenated hydrocarbons (such as halothane, isoflurane, and enflurane), which have largely replaced ether and chloroform. These are used in hospital operating theatres, during childbirth in maternity hospitals, in ambulances, in general hospital wards during painful procedures, in dentistry, for sedation, etc. • Ethylene oxide - Applications - for sterilization of surgical equipment and medical devices, in central supply areas, and, at times, in operating rooms. • Oxygen - Stored in bulk tank or cylinders, in gaseous or liquid form, or supplied by central piping. Application - inhalation supply for patients. • Compressed air - Applications - in laboratory work, inhalation therapy equipment, maintenance equipment, and environmental control systems.
  • 13. Radioactive Wastes • The use of radiation sources in medical and other applications is widespread throughout the world. Occasionally, the public is exposed to radioactive waste, usually originating from radiotherapy treatments, that has not been properly disposed of. With new methods of treatment the threat to such wastes will grow exponentially
  • 14. Immunisation is vital to prevent disease and save lives. However, large scale vaccination programs can create enormous amounts of waste. Often, waste is open burned or donors build cheap small scale incinerators which are used to burn syringes from the vaccination program and other medical waste after the vaccination program is over, perpetuating the problem of dioxin pollution. In June 2000, six children were diagnosed with a mild form of smallpox (vaccinia virus) after having played with glass ampoules containing expired smallpox vaccine at a garbage dump in Vladivostok (Russia). Although the infections were not life- threatening, the vaccine ampoules should have been treated before being discarded.
  • 15. Components of Bio-Medical Wastes • Human Anatomical Waste (tissues, organs, body parts etc.) • Animal Waste (as above, generated during research/experimentation, from veterinary hospitals etc.) • Microbiology and biotechnology waste, such as, laboratory cultures, micro-organisms, human and animal cell cultures, toxins etc. • Waste sharps, such as, hypodermic needles, syringes, scalpels, broken glass etc. • Discarded medicines and cyto-toxic drugs • Soiled waste, such as dressing, bandages, plaster casts, material contaminated with blood etc. • Solid waste (disposable items like tubes, catheters etc. excluding sharps) • Liquid waste generated from any of the infected areas • Incineration Ash • Chemical Waste
  • 16.
  • 17. Environmental Concerns • Spread of infection and disease through vectors (fly, mosquito, insects etc.) which affect the in-house as well as surrounding population. • Spread of infection through contact / injury among medical/non-medical personnel and sweepers / rag pickers, especially from the sharps (needles, blades etc). • Spread of infection through unauthorised recycling of disposable items such as hypodermic needles, tubes, blades, bottles etc. • Reaction due to use of discarded medicines. • Toxic emissions from defective / inefficient incinerators. • Indiscriminate disposal of incinerator ash / residues.