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All biohazardous waste must be disposed of by one of the following means.
There are no exceptions. Call Environmental Health and Risk Management
at 243-4503 for free pick up of your biohazardous waste.
All sharps must be collected in durable containers for offsite disposal
with our biohazardous waste contractor. Special heavy wall red plastic
biohazardous sharps containers, coffee cans or other puncture proof,
stiff walled containers may be used for sharps collection. Plastic milk
bottles, cardboard boxes or other containers that are likely to allow
a needle to penetrate the container walls during handling may NOT be
used. Under no circumstances may sharps be disposed of in the normal
trash.
Liquid blood or other body fluids may be disposed of down the drain.
If you know these materials contain agents that are infectious via airborne
transmission, you should disinfect them with a bleach solution prior
to drain disposal.
Solid biohazardous waste such as used bandages, gloves, counter pads,
disposable labware pipette tips etc. may be treated in several different
ways.
Small quantities may be chemically disinfected and disposed of in the
normal trash as long as no appreciable free liquid is present.
Dry waste may be autoclaved and disposed of in the normal trash if the
biohazard symbol is defaced on the bag prior to disposal. If biohazard
bags are used that auto indicate that acceptable temperatures have been
attained, then the bags and contents may be disposed of without manually
defacing the biohazard symbol.
Dry waste, like sharps may be disposed of through our offsite biohazardous
waste contractor. NEVER put sharps in a biohazardous waste bag. You or
someone else may experience a needle stick through the bag if all sharps
are not contained as outlined above.
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