Reproduced
from: http://www.indialegallive.com/health/biomedical-waste-handle-with-care-67977,
published June 30, 2019
A
judge has pulled up hospitals and healthcare facilities in Noida, Greater Noida
and Ghaziabad for causing 40 percent of recurrent infections in patients by not
scientifically disposing of waste
By
Dr KK Aggarwal
Healthcare
waste is dangerous and infectious. As per the UP Solid Waste Management
Monitoring Committee, hospitals and healthcare facilities in Noida, Greater
Noida and Ghaziabad are responsible for 40 percent of recurrent infections in
patients as they don’t adhere to scientific disposal of biomedical waste
through segregation.
Healthcare
waste includes all 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 homes (dialysis,
insulin injections, etc). Between 75 to 90 percent of the waste produced by
healthcare providers is non-risk or “general” waste, comparable to domestic
waste. It comes mostly from the administrative and housekeeping functions of
healthcare establishments and may include waste generated during the
maintenance of these premises. The remaining 10-25 percent of healthcare waste
is regarded as hazardous and may create a variety of health risks.
Hazardous
healthcare waste (also known as healthcare risk waste) needs special
regulation, but general wastes can be dealt with by municipal waste disposal
mechanisms. There are different categories of healthcare waste.
·
Infectious waste:
Waste suspected to contain pathogens such as laboratory cultures, waste from
isolation wards, tissues (swabs), materials, or equipment that have been in
contact with infected patients, excreta.
·
Pathological waste:
Human tissues, blood and other body fluids, foetuses.
·
Sharps: Sharp waste
such as needles, infusion sets, scalpels, knives, blades, broken glass.
·
Pharmaceutical waste:
Waste containing pharmaceuticals that have expired or are no longer needed,
items contaminated by or containing pharmaceuticals (bottles, boxes).
·
Genotoxic waste:
Waste containing cytostatic drugs (often used in cancer therapy), genotoxic
chemicals.
·
Chemical waste:
Waste containing laboratory reagents, film developers, disinfectants that are
expired or no longer needed.
·
Solvents: Wastes with
high content of batteries, broken thermometers, blood-pressure gauges, heavy
metals.
·
Pressurised containers:
Gas cylinders, gas cartridges, aerosol cans.
·
Radioactive waste:
Waste containing radioactive substances such as unused liquids from
radiotherapy or laboratory research, contaminated glassware, packages or
absorbent paper; urine and excreta from patients treated or tested with
unsealed radionuclides.
Justice
DP Singh, the chairman of the Committee, said that hospitals and healthcare
facilities across Noida, Greater Noida and Ghaziabad are making a mockery of
biomedical waste handling rules by dumping medical waste with municipal
garbage. “I have data from an international source that says about 35-40
percent of the recurrent infections occur from hospitals and medical centres
due to such negligence of non-segregated waste,” he said. He has fixed June 30
as the deadline for covering of all open dump sites and segregation of waste at
public places, including biomedical waste, in Noida and Ghaziabad.
This
directive is important as infectious waste often contains pathogens (bacteria,
viruses, parasites or fungi) in sufficient concentration or quantity to cause
disease in susceptible hosts. This category includes:
·
Cultures and stocks of infectious agents from
laboratories.
·
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.
·
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).
·
Infected animals from laboratories.
·
Any other instruments or materials that have been in
contact with infected persons or animals.
On
March 19, the government published in the e-gazette, the Bio-Medical Waste
Management (Amendment) Rules, 2019. The key points of the amended rules are as
follows:
·
The occupier of all bedded healthcare units shall
maintain and update on a day-to-day basis the biomedical waste management register.
·
All bedded healthcare units shall display the monthly
record of waste disposal management on their websites.
·
Such healthcare facilities (irrespective of any number
of beds) shall make the annual report available on their websites before March
19, 2021.
·
Healthcare facilities having less than 10 beds shall
have to comply with the output discharge standard for liquid waste by December
31, 2019.
In
addition, the Indian Penal Code (IPC) too has various sections dealing with such
waste. Section 269, IPC, says: “Negligent act likely to spread infection of
disease dangerous to life—Whoever unlawfully or negligently does any act which
is, and which he knows or has reason to believe to be likely to spread the
infection of any disease dangerous to life, shall be punished with imprisonment
of either description for a term which may extend to six months, or with fine,
or with both.”
Section
270 deals with a “Malignant act likely to spread infection of disease dangerous
to life—Whoever malignantly does any act which is, and which he knows or has
reason to believe to be, likely to spread the infection of any disease
dangerous to life, shall be punished with imprisonment of either description
for a term which may extend to two years, or with fine, or with both.”
There
are other carriers of infections too. According to a new study in the Emergency
Medicine Journal, December 1, 2018, oxygen cylinders act as carriers for a
bacterium called methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). In the
study, researchers tested the surface of nine oxygen cylinders and regulators
in ambulances at an emergency medical services station in North Alabama, US,
while 70 offsite oxygen cylinders were also tested. Of the nine oxygen
cylinders tested in ambulances, all had MRSA colonisation (100 percent). MRSA
was also present on 67 of 70 oxygen cylinders (96 percent) tested at the
offsite oxygen cylinder storage area.
Last
year, a study reported in the September 2018 issue of American Journal of
Infection Control found that patient privacy curtains surrounding beds in
hospitals become progressively contaminated with bacteria, including MRSA. The
increased MRSA positivity was observed between 10 to 14 days after the curtains
are hung. By the 14th day, seven (87.5 percent) of the eight tested curtains
were positive for MRSA. This was the time to either change or clean the
curtains, suggested the study.
A
new study published online on December 12, 2018, in the Infection Control and
Hospital Epidemiology reported stethoscopes as carriers of infection. Out of 40
stethoscopes in use in an ICU, all had a high abundance of staphylococcus
bacteria, with “definitive” S aureus bacteria present on 24 of 40 stethoscopes
tested.
The
British Medical Journal reported in 2015 that white coats worn by
doctors harbour potential contaminants and contribute considerably to the
burden of disease acquired in hospital by spreading infection. Research has
also shown an association of yoga mats with fungal, bacterial and viral infections.
In
addition to healthcare waste, equipment handles, clothes, carpets, etc, are
also sources of bacteria. Computers, telephones, telephone mouthpieces,
headsets, desks, ATMs, cash machines and elevator buttons have also been
reported as potential sources for transmitting infectious microorganisms. Notes
and coins are also a source of infection. Bank notes recovered from hospitals
may be highly contaminated by staphylococcus aureus, while salmonella,
Escherichia coli and S aureus are commonly isolated from bank notes from food
outlets. Influenza virus, norovirus, rhinovirus, hepatitis A virus and
rotavirus can be transmitted through hand contact.
This
new study only adds to the growing list of evidence that for all practical
purposes, everything used in healthcare can be considered to be contaminated
and a potential source of cross-contamination in hospitals. While hand to hand
transmission of microbes remains an important route of spread of infection,
these studies highlight the role of contaminated environmental surfaces in the
transmission of healthcare-associated infections.
The
one way to prevent the spread is proper biomedical waste disposal and adoption
of universal precautions.
Every
surface in a healthcare setting needs to be assumed infected unless proven
otherwise.
Dr KK Aggarwal
Padma Shri Awardee
President Elect Confederation of
Medical Associations in Asia and Oceania
(CMAAO)
Group Editor-in-Chief IJCP Publications
President Heart Care Foundation of
India
Past National President
IMA
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