Main Sources of Medical Waste in Hospitals and Clinics
Main Sources of Medical Waste in Hospitals and Clinics
Hospitals and clinics generate different types of waste across different departments. Understanding where medical waste comes from helps facilities place the right containers in the right locations and reduce unsafe handling.
1. Treatment rooms and wards
Medical wards and treatment rooms generate dressings, gloves, swabs, gauze, tubing, contaminated packaging and sometimes sharps. These areas need clear segregation between general waste, infectious waste and sharps waste.
2. Operating theatres
Operating theatres can generate sharps, blood-contaminated materials, gowns, drapes, suction containers and anatomical waste. Because waste volumes can be high, theatre areas need strong container placement and frequent removal.
3. Laboratories
Laboratories may generate slides, pipettes, culture materials, sample containers, broken glass and chemical waste. Lab waste requires careful sorting because sharps, infectious waste and chemicals may need separate disposal routes.
4. Pharmacies and medicine rooms
Expired medicines, damaged stock and contaminated pharmaceutical items should not be placed into general waste. Pharmaceutical waste should be separated and stored securely before collection.
5. Dental rooms
Dental practices generate sharps, contaminated gauze, gloves, suction tips and small clinical waste items. Sharps containers should be positioned close to the point of use.
6. Vaccination and injection areas
Vaccination rooms generate needles, syringes, vials, cotton wool and packaging. A sharps container should be immediately accessible so needles are discarded without being carried around.
7. Cleaning and environmental services
Cleaners may handle waste bags, spills and contaminated materials. They need training, PPE and a clear process for reporting incorrectly discarded sharps or leaking containers.
8. General facility areas
Reception, offices and kitchens mostly generate general waste. Keeping this separate from healthcare risk waste helps reduce unnecessary disposal costs.
Build the system around the waste source
The best medical waste system starts with a department-by-department review. Place containers where waste is created, train staff and schedule collections around actual waste volumes.
MNE Waste Management helps South African healthcare facilities choose suitable containers and collection plans for each waste source.
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