Preface 2. Definition and Description of "Medical Waste"
Preface 2. Definition and Description of "Medical Waste"
WASTE
MANAGEMENT
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREFACE 6 1. INTRODUCTION 8
6. MINIMIZATION, RECYCLING 41
158
PREFACE
The world is generating more and more waste and hospi
tals and health centres are no exception. Medical waste can
be infectious, contain toxic chemicals and pose contamina
tion risks to both people and the environment. If patients
are to receive health care and recover in safe surroundings,
waste must be disposed of safely.
2. DEFINITION
AND
DESCRIPTION OF
“MEDICAL
WASTE”
2.1 Description of medical waste
The term “medical waste” covers all wastes produced in
health-care or diagnostic activities.
c. Infectious waste
a. Pharmaceutical waste
b. Cytotoxic waste
Pressurized containers
3. MEDICAL
WASTE
RISKS AND
IMPACT
ON HEALTH
AND THE
ENVIRONMENT
3.1 Persons potentially exposed
All persons who are in contact with hazardous medical
waste are potentially exposed to the various risks it entails:
persons inside the establishment generating the waste,
those who handle it, and persons outside the facility
who may be in contact with hazardous wastes or their
by-products, if there is no medical waste management or
if that management is inadequate.
note1
On the other hand, the survival time of the micro-organisms present in medical
waste is short (probably because the wastes contain disinfectants).
2 WHO 2010, Public Health Agency of Canada 2001, Thomson et al. 2003.
3. MEDICAL WASTE RISKS AND IMPACT ON HEALTH AND THE ENVIRONMENT
Acetone
eyes, rinse label.
immediately
with plenty Risk
of water and
Highly seek medical statements
flammable Irritant
advice.
Precautionary
S46 If
swallowed, statements
seek medical
S9 Keep advice (R-statements)
container in a immediately
R11 Highly
well-ventilated and show this
flammable. (P-statements)
place.
R36 Irritating to
the eyes. S16 Keep away
from sources of
R66 Repeated
exposure may ignition – No
cause skin smoking.
dryness or
cracking.
R67 Vapours
may cause
drowsiness and
dizziness.
S26 In case of
contact with container or
Name, address and telephone number
of the firm responsible in Switzerland.
Figure 3.1: Example of the labelling of chemicals
(European system applicable until 2015)
3. MEDICAL WASTE RISKS AND IMPACT ON HEALTH AND THE ENVIRONMENT
Acetone
4. LEGISLATION
4.1 International agreements
Several international agreements have been concluded
which lay down fundamental principles concerning public
health, environmental protection and the safe manage
ment of hazardous wastes. These principles and conven
tions are set out below and must be taken into account in
the planning of hazardous medical waste management.
Precautionary principle
Proximity principle
Hazardous wastes must be treated and disposed of as close as
possible to where they are produced.
Africa
Angola, Benin, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Chad,
Comoros, Congo, Central African Republic, Côte d’Ivoire,
Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea Bissau,
Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali,
Mauritania, Mozambique, Niger, Nigeria, Uganda, Rwanda,
Senegal, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Sudan, Tanzania, Togo,
Zambia, Zimbabwe.
South America
Bolivia, Cuba, Guyana, Haiti, Honduras, Nicaragua.
Middle East:
Afghanistan, Djibouti, Pakistan, Yemen.
Europe
Armenia, Azerbaijan, Kyrgyzstan, Georgia, Moldavia,
Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Ukraine.
Asia
Bangladesh, Bhutan, Cambodia, Democratic People’s
Republic of Korea, India, Indonesia, Laos, Mongolia,
Myanmar, Nepal, Solomon Islands, Sri Lanka, Timor-Leste,
Viet Nam.
4. LEGISLATION
5.
FUNDAMENTAL
PRINCIPLES
OF A WASTE
MANAGEME
NT
PROGRAMM
E
5.1 Assigning responsibilities
8 For the sake of simplicity and easier reading, the masculine form is used
throughout. It is to be understood as including women exercising the various
professions.
Stages Tools
Inventory Quantification of waste, Annex 3.1 Checklist for describing the current
situation, Annex 3.2
Minimization/recycling and purchasing policy Chapter 6
Sorting, collection, storage and transport Chapters 7, 8 and 9
Identification and evaluation ofChapter 10
treatment/ disposal options - Example: Annex 3.3
Diagram of waste flows
Protective measures Chapter 11 Training Chapter 12
Estimating costs Section 5.5
publication: CEHA, Basic steps in the
Implementation strategy Audit and preparation of health care
follow-up waste management plans for
Section 5.6 health care establishments, 2002,
www.emro.who.int/ceha
Audit checklist, Annex 3.4
6.
MINIMIZATION,
RECYCLING
The reduction of waste generation must be encouraged by
the following practices:
11 http://www.noharm.org
6. MINIMIZATION, RECYCLING
> Product recycling
– Recycling of batteries, paper, glass, metals and plastic.
– Composting of plant waste (kitchen and garden
wastes).
– Recycling of the silver used in photographic
processing.
– Recovering energy for water heating for example.
7.
SORTING,
RECEPTACL
ES AND
HANDLING
7.1 Sorting principles
Sorting consists of clearly identifying the various types of
waste and how they can be collected separately. There are
two important principles that must be followed:
Yellow and
Yellow and
infectious” and
Photo 7.4:
Handling a bag of wastes
8.
COLLECTION
AND
STORAGE
Waste must be collected regularly - at least once a day. It must
never be allowed to accumulate where it is produced. A daily
collection programme and collection round must be planned.
Each type of waste must be collected and stored separately.
9. TRANSPORT
9.1 Vehicles and means of conveyance
10.
TREATMENT
AND DISPOSAL
10.1 Choosing treatment and disposal
methods
The choice of treatment and disposal techniques depends on a
number of parameters: the quantity and type of wastes produced,
whether or not there is a waste treatment site near the hospital, the
cultural acceptance of treatment methods, the availability of
reliable means of transport, whether there is enough space
around the
hospital, the availability of financial, material and human resources,
the availability of a regular supply of electricity, whether or not
there is national legislation on the subject, the climate,
groundwater level, etc.
15 See the following publication for further details on techniques other than
incineration (suppliers, prices, technologies): Health Care Without Harm, Non
Incineration Medical Waste Treatment Technologies.
http://www.noharm.org/
lib/downloads/waste/Non-Incineration_Technologies.pdf
quantities
3d.
Chemic
yes no no no no no no
al waste
yes no
small
ye no no yes sm sm
s all all
no n
o qua qua
ntiti ntiti
es es
yes yes
no
after decontamination
yes
no
with precautions
yes
small quantities,
encapsulation
using
yes
r
900-120 dual-ch >800°C to disinfec Encaps pit pit
0°C amber 300°-40 tion ulation
Single-c Off/site
Rotary Pyrolyti incinera 0°C Chemic Autocla
hamber On-site sanitary
kiln c or tor al ve Needle
incinera burial landfills
10. TREATMENT AND DISPOSAL
Sorting
Infectious or
Sharps
On-site treatment
Is it a densely
populated area
No No (people living
Is there plenty of space
available on-site?
potentially within a radius of
contaminated waste less than 50 m)?
Household refuse
Local
waste-treatment
facility
Yes
No
conditions
Is it possible to Are the incineration acceptable?
train staff and
invest resources Yes
in incineration Yes Yes
or alternative Small incinerator
methods?
No
waste burial pit
Ash
On-site
10.2 Incineration
Controlled incineration at high temperatures (over 1000°C)
is one of the few technologies with which all types of
health-care waste can be treated properly and it has the
advantage ofsignificantly reducing the volume and weight
of the wastes treated.
1 Loading door
2 Primary combustion
chamber
8 6 Gas transfer tunnel
7 Secondary
combustion
3
chamber
8 Chimney
5
1
6
3 Air inlet
4 Fire grate
5 Ash door
2
4
Stockholm Convention.
Drawbacks
rotary kilns).
Relatively high operating and maintenance >
costs; the more sophisticated the emission
control system, the higher the costs.
ff, Requires electricity, highly skilled sta >
and fuel.
Produces ash that contains leached metals,
dioxins and furans.
>
pharmaceutical wastes.
Produces ash that contains leached >
metals, dioxins and furans.
High-temperature incinerato r
)
(>1000°C incinerato refuse
Rotary r (800°- incinerati
)
kiln t
Dual-cha 900°C Ho on plan
(>1200°C) mber usehold
Single-chamber
Wastes are only partially burnt – risk of >
incinerator (300°-400°C)
Advantages Drawbacks
Advantages Drawbacks
Needle extractor
> Destroys the needles
completely.
> Plastic from syringes can
be recycled after being
disinfected and shredded.
> Risk of splashing body
fluids. > Some models run
on electricity. > The
needles and syringes
remain contaminated.
Needle destroyer > Risk of breakdown of
> Prevents rdestroyer. > The needles
syringes are prone to come out of
> Relativelythe receptacle.
(Sfr 2 > The safety of the > A sterile part of the
availableprocess has not been needle remains attached to
manufactestablished. the syringe.
> The volum
reduced.
> Plastic fro> Cost (Sfr 100 to Sfr 600).
be recyclThere should be one in
disinfecteeach room or ward.
> Easy to us> Requires electricity.
20
http://www.path.org/publications/browse.php?k=10
21 http://www.healthcarewaste.org
10. TREATMENT AND DISPOSAL
10.6 Shredders
Shredders cut the waste into small pieces. This
technique requires competent staff for operating and
maintaining the device, since some of these rotary
devices are indus trial models. They are often built into
closed chemical or thermal disinfection systems.
However, grain mills can be converted into simple
shredders, but due to the risk forstaff while the
shredder isrunning only disinfected waste should be
treated in these devices. Shredding, which in certain
cir cumstances provides a means of recycling plastics
and nee dles,should be considered whenever needles
and syringes are available in large quantities, this
involves a centralized system for collecting and
transporting wastesfrom the vari ous facilities.
Advantages Drawbacks
Advantages Drawbacks
are small.
> Simple, inexpensive and safe.
> The weight and volume of the waste
> A solution that can be
is increased.
envisaged for sharps and
pharmaceutical wastes.
> The risks for scavengers are reduced.
> To be regarded as a
temporary solution. 10.8 Disposal in a sanitary
> The quantities of waste treated landfill or waste burial pit
10. TREATMENT AND DISPOSAL
Advantages Drawbacks
Sanitary
> Simple anthe hospital.
landfill,
trench inexpens> Control is facilitated.
method operating> The health-care wastes
> Can be care not treated and remain
out usinghazardous.
existin> The landfill must be
municipasecure, fenced in, and
managem guarded.
system. > > Scavengers and animals
Scavengersneed to be controlled.
access the > A high degree of
health-carecoordination is needed
the landfill ibetween collectors and
Separate pit on hospital managed. landfill operators. > Makes
site health workers less aware
of the need to sort the
various types of waste. >
> Simple and relatively Transport to the landfill can
inexpensive to build be a lengthy and costly
and manage. operation.
> Dangerous > Risk of water pollution.
substances are not
> The health-care waste is
transported outside not treated and remains
hazardous. > Vectors (insects, controlled.
> Risk of water pollution. rodents, etc.) need to be > Space is needed around
> Problem of odour. the hospital.
10. TREATMENT AND DISPOSAL
50 mg/l
20 mg/l
Acids – alkalis Exceptions are allowed if the chemicals are mixed with a
sufficient quantity of other sewer
effluents.