Waste Management
Waste Management
Waste Management
Bio-Medical Waste
As per WHO norms the health-care waste includes all the waste generated by
healthcare establishments, research facilities, and laboratories. In addition, it
includes the waste originating from minor or scattered sources such as that
produced in the course of health care undertaken in the home (dialysis, insulin
injections, etc.)
Burial of waste
Burial should be at least 50 meters from the nearest water source.
Burial pit should be 1-2 meters wide and 2-5 meters deep.
The bottom of the pit should be at east 1.8 meters above the water table.
Erect a fence or a wall around the site to keep out animals.
Every time solid medical waste is added to the pit, cover it with 10-30 cm of dirt.
When the level of waste reaches to within 30- cm of ground level, fill the pit with dirt,
seal it with concrete, and dig a new pit.
Incineration of solid medical waste Incinerating is
the best option for solid waste disposal, since the
high
temperature
(1300
C)
destroys
microorganisms and reduces the amount of
waste.
TYPE OF WASTE
Category No. 1
Category No. 2
Animal Waste
(Animal tissues, organs, body parts, carcasses,
bleeding parts, fluid, blood and experimental
animals used in research, waste generated by
veterinary hospitals and colleges, discharge
from hospitals, animal houses)
Category No. 3
Category No. 4
Disinfecting (chemical
treatment@@ / autoclaving /
microwaving and mutilation /
shredding
Category No. 5
Category No. 6
Incineration@ / autoclaving /
microwaving
Category No. 7
Disinfecting by chemical
treatment@@ / autoclaving /
microwaving and mutilation /
shredding
Category No. 8
Disinfecting by chemical
treatment@@ and discharge
into drains
Category No. 9
Category No.10
BIOHAZARD
CYTOTOXIC
Waste Generation
Out Patient
Injection Room
General Ward
Labour Room
Operation Theatre
Casualty/ Emergency
Laboratory
Pharmacy
Discarded medicines
Hazardous
Quantity (kg/bed/day)
2.5
4.5
2.5
3.0
1.5
15%
5%
10%
Non-hazardous
85%
Functional Areas
The Waste Management Unit will include the following Functional Areas:
Enclosed workstation with a workbench, telephone and computer outlet
to undertake recording and reporting functions; it should have visual
control of the waste handling facility
General wet waste holding area
Loading Dock and area with provision
Clinical waste holding rooms
Paper and recyclable materials collection
Clean bin storage area; a variety of bins need to be stored pending
distribution to the hospital units
The following Functional Areas are optional requirements:
A waste weighing and recording station, which includes a floor level
digital weighbridge and bar code recorder. This area will be required if
waste handling policy includes weighing and tracking.
An upright freezer may be required to store tissue pending dispatch for
incineration.
A radioactive waste storage
The Clinical Waste Storage is reserved for healthcare clinical waste only.
The storage space should be:
well-lit and ventilated;
adjacent to Dirty Loading Dock;
located away from food preparation and general storage areas;
located away from routes used by the public;
totally enclosed and secure;
provided with separate storage areas for sharps receptacles,
anatomical and pharmaceutical waste;
sited on a well-drained, impervious surface;
readily accessible by authorised staff;
kept locked when not in use;
secure from entry by animals and free from insect or rodent
infestations;
provided with staff washing facilities;
clearly marked with warning signs;
appropriately drained to a sewer (if approved by local regulations)
Functional Relationships
Room/Space
Qty
Area(m2 )
Qty
Area(m2 )
Room/Space
Qty
Area(m2 ) Qty
Area(m2 )
Policies
National Legislations Governing Waste Management:
The Water (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1974 (for liquid waste)
The Air (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1981( for air quality)
Hazardous Wastes (Management, Handling and Trans boundary (Movement) Rules, 2008 (for
hazardous waste).
The Bio- Medical Wastes (Management and Handling) Rules 1998 (for hospital waste)
The Municipal Solid Wastes (Management and Handling) Rules, 2000 (for domestic municipal
waste)
Battery (Management and Handling) Rules, 2001 (for used batteries waste).
Excerpts from Bio- Medical Waste (Management and Handling) Rules 1998 and as Amended.
The Ministry of Environment and Forest has drafted certain rules in exercise of powers
conferred by sections 6,8 and 25 of the environment (protection) act, 1986.