Rank: Forum user
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We have office and light manufacturing facilities at our premises.
After we sent two of our employees on a 3 day first aid at work course, they came back and enquired why we didn't have any clinical waste bins on the premises - we've never had any.
We don't deal with sharps or bodily fluids, only risk may be when dealing with elastoplasts/bandages etc with blood, but no instances to date (touch wood)
Question is - do we need a clinical waste bin, or are we OK (as I thought) to ensure these items are double bagged and put into normal waste?
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Rank: Super forum user
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What you currently do is fine - in my opinion
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Rank: Super forum user
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Your current arrangements are perfectly safe and fully compliant with your obligations to waste management.
The wastes are not unduly hazardous, but should be handled with care. Glove use may at times be warranted, and hand washing is essential. Wastes should be wrapped in paper and placed into a black sack with domestic-type waste.
As long as these are just an occasional waste arising, the situation is analogous to similar wastes from the domestic environment. Dressings etc into sacks, but gauzes and the like (don't use cotton wool on open wounds) can go down the loo if you prefer.
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Rank: Super forum user
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From what you are describing I would concur with the previous replies and would say your waste would be classed as hygiene/offensive waste which is generated from a 'normal' healthy population and not clinical waste. It is worth bearing in mind however that the waste may well be classed as clinical waste if you knew that the person who was recieving treatment/first aid has an infectious disease, eg AIDS, Hepatitis. So you may be wise to think about what you would then do in that situation, for the future.
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Rank: Super forum user
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chas wrote:From what you are describing I would concur with the previous replies and would say your waste would be classed as hygiene/offensive waste which is generated from a 'normal' healthy population and not clinical waste. It is worth bearing in mind however that the waste may well be classed as clinical waste if you knew that the person who was recieving treatment/first aid has an infectious disease, eg AIDS, Hepatitis. So you may be wise to think about what you would then do in that situation, for the future.
No. That is wrong.
If the waste is handled carefully, whether you know of some possibly coincidental virus carriage or not, small arisings as described CAN and should be placed into the domestic waste stream.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Put the waste into the sanitary towel waste bin and your problem is solved as you will aleady have somebody collecting it and without going into all the in's and outs blood etc., in an industrial environment as you are, is seen as hazardous clinical waste
Please do not put things down the loo as its costing the counrty a fortune to keep our sewers etc clear
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Rank: Super forum user
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bob youel wrote:Put the waste into the sanitary towel waste bin
Precisely the advise I give, have given and will continue to give.
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