Dr K K Aggarwal
President Confederation of Medical Associations of Asia and Oceania,
HCFI and Past National President IMA
And
Dr Anil Kumar
Director Herat
Care Foundation of India
With regular inputs from Dr Monica Vasudev
771: Safe handling and disposal of PPEs, Home
Masks etc.
The requirement of PPEs:
To safeguard health workers from the COVID-19, it is required to
have suitable Personal Protective
Equipment (PPE), which include goggles, face-shield, mask,
gloves, coverall/gowns (with or without aprons), headcover and shoe
cover. Coverall/gowns are designed to protect the torso of healthcare providers from exposure to the virus.
The coverall should be impermeable to blood, body fluids etc. India needs a huge
quantity of such overalls.
As per the guidelines of the WHO Disease Commodity Package (Version 4.0),
the fabric that clears/passes ‘Synthetic Blood Penetration Resistance Test’
(ISO 16603) and the coverall that passes ‘Resistance to penetration by
biologically contaminated solid particles (ISO 22612:2005), maybe
considered as the benchmark specification to manufacture coveralls. ASTM F
1670/F-1670M-08(2014) may be used to test synthetic blood penetration.
Disposal
of PPEs, Masks etc:
In India, safe handling
and disposal of PPEs, Masks etc. are covered under Bio-medical Waste Management
Rules, 2016.
In exercise of the powers
conferred by Section 6, 8 and 25 of the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 (29
of 1986), and in supersession of the Bio-Medical Waste (Management and
Handling) Rules, 1998 and further amendments made thereof, the Central Government vide G.S.R. 343(E) dated
28th March 2016 published the Bio-medical
Waste Management Rules, 2016. These rules apply to all persons who
generate, collect, receive, store, transport, treat, dispose, or handle bio-
medical waste in any form including hospitals, nursing homes, clinics,
dispensaries, veterinary institutions, animal houses, pathological
laboratories, blood banks, Ayush hospitals, clinical establishments, research
or educational institutions, health camps, medical or surgical camps,
vaccination camps, blood donation camps, first aid rooms of schools, forensic
laboratories and research labs.
The prescribed authority for enforcement of the provisions of these
rules in respect of all the health care facilities located in any State/Union
Territory is the respective State
Pollution Control Board (SPCB)/ Pollution Control Committee (PCC) and in
case of health care establishments of the Armed Forces under the Ministry of
Defence shall be the Director-General, Armed Forces Medical Services (DGAFMS).
These rules stipulate duties of the Occupier or Operator of a Common
Bio-medical Waste Treatment Facility as well as the identified Authorities. According to these rules, every occupier or
operator handling bio-medical waste, irrespective of the quantity is required
to obtain authorization from the respective prescribed authority i.e. State
Pollution Control Board and Pollution Control Committee, as the case may be.
These rules consist of four schedules and five forms. These Rules were further
amended in the year 2018 and 2019.
As per Guidelines for Handling, Treatment and
Disposal of Waste Generated during Treatment/Diagnosis/ Quarantine of COVID-19
Patients – Revision 2 dated 18/04/2020
issued by CPCB, with regard to COVID-19
Isolation wards: (isolation wards are those where COVID-19 positive
patients are being kept for treatment/diagnosis), the following steps are needed to
ensure safe handling and disposal of PPEs, used masks, head cover/cap,
shoe-cover, disposable linen Gown, non-plastic or semi-plastic coverall,:
·
Collect
used PPEs such as goggles, face-shield, splash-proof apron, Plastic Coverall,
Hazmat suit, nitrile gloves into Red bag;
·
Collect
used masks (including triple-layer mask, N95 mask, etc.), head cover/cap,
shoe-cover, disposable linen Gown, non-plastic or semi-plastic coverall in
Yellow bags.
These Red bags and Yellow
bags are needed to be treated and disposed of as per Part 1 of Schedule I of Bio-medical
Waste Management Rules, 2016 as amended to date.
However, as per CPCB Guidelines-Revision 2 dated 18/04/2020, used masks and gloves
generated from home quarantine or other
households should be kept in a paper bag for a minimum of 72 hours prior to
disposal of the same as general waste. It is advisable to cut the masks prior
to disposal to prevent reuse.
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