Biomedical waste is generated from biological and medical sources and activities, such as the diagnosis, prevention, or treatment of diseases.
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Biomedical waste is generated from biological and medical sources and activities, such as the diagnosis, prevention, or treatment of diseases.
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Common generators of biomedical waste include hospitals, health clinics, nursing homes, emergency medical services, medical research laboratories, offices of physicians, dentists, veterinarians, home health care and morgues or funeral homes.
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Biomedical waste is distinct from normal trash or general waste, and differs from other types of hazardous waste, such as chemical, radioactive, universal or industrial waste.
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Biomedical waste must be properly managed and disposed of to protect the environment, general public and workers, especially healthcare and sanitation workers who are at risk of exposure to biomedical waste as an occupational hazard.
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Steps in the management of biomedical waste include generation, accumulation, handling, storage, treatment, transport and disposal.
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On-site treatment of large quantities of biomedical waste usually requires the use of relatively expensive equipment, and is generally only cost effective for very large hospitals and major universities who have the space, labour and budget to operate such equipment.
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Biomedical waste should be collected in containers that are leak-proof and sufficiently strong to prevent breakage during handling.
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An open funnel placed in the mouth of a Biomedical waste container has been shown to allow significant evaporation of chemicals into the surrounding atmosphere, which is then inhaled by laboratory personnel, and contributes a primary component to the threat of completing the fire triangle.
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Goals of biomedical waste treatment are to reduce or eliminate the waste's hazards, and usually to make the waste unrecognizable.
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Biomedical waste maintains that the problem was caused by a reduction in incineration capacity, and the re-classification of clinical waste as “offensive”, which meant more needed incineration.
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Improper management of health care Biomedical waste can have both direct and indirect health consequences for health personnel, community members and on the environment.
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Biomedical waste is not limited to medical instruments; it includes medicine, waste stored in red biohazard bags, and materials used for patient care, such as cotton and bandaids.
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The most serious effect that biomedical waste has on our seas is the discharge of poisons into the waters that could then be consumed by ocean life creatures.
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Three type of medical Biomedical waste incinerators are controlled air, excess air, and rotary kiln.
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California created the Medical Waste Management Program, which regulates the generation, handling, storage, treatment, and disposal of medical Biomedical waste by providing oversight for the implementation of the Medical Waste Management Act.
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The intense heat generated by the plasma enables it to dispose all types of waste including municipal solid waste, biomedical waste and hazardous waste in a safe and reliable manner.
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Voluntary clean-ups would involve hospital staff in assuring that medical Biomedical waste is not littered around the hospital or thrown into regular garbage bins.
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