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Medical Wastes/Incinerators
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BEST PRACTICES
Even when not required by environmental regulations, the following
best practices are recommended associated with clinical waste incinerators.
- Segregate clinical wastes at the point of generation, do not
mix clinical waste with hazardous or radioactive waste. Further
segregate wastes into three categories, Sharps, Waste for Incineration
and Waste for Other Disposal/treatment options. This will minimise
the amount of waste that must be incinerated and possibly keep
the incinerator in a lower operating classification minimising
the regulatory requirements of the incinerator.
- Seek alternative treatments other than incineration for some
types of clinical wastes. Sharps can usually be chemically treated
and then disposed of as solid waste, in some cases certain biological
fluids may be disposed of down the sanitary sewer system if approved
by the local waste water treatment plant, other biological fluids
may be chemically treated and then disposed of through a sanitary
sewer system.
- Be sure clinical waste is properly bagged and/or containerised
as close to it’s source of generation as possible. This
will protect those that transport and handle the waste downstream.
- Clearly mark containers as containing clinical waste.
- Store clinical waste near its point of generation to limit
the amount the waste must that be handled.
- Review opportunities for waste minimisation. Where practical
reduce the use of single use disposable plastic items and use
washable, sterilisable items that can be reused.
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