9 Things Every Business Should Know About Medical Waste Disposal
9 Things Every Business Should Know About Medical Waste Disposal
Medical waste disposal can feel complicated, but the basics are simple when the process is clear. Any business that produces sharps, infectious waste, contaminated materials or medicine waste needs a safe system from the point of use to final treatment.
1. Medical waste is not general waste
Used needles, contaminated swabs, dressings, gloves and expired medicine should not be mixed with normal rubbish.
2. Segregation starts where waste is created
Place the correct container close to treatment rooms, injection areas, tattoo stations, dental chairs and medicine rooms.
3. Sharps need sharps bins
Needles, blades, lancets and scalpels must go into rigid, puncture-resistant sharps containers.
4. Infectious waste needs biohazard packaging
Contaminated soft waste should be placed into suitable biohazard boxes or healthcare risk waste packaging.
5. Pharmaceutical waste needs its own stream
Expired and unwanted medicine should be separated from general medical waste and stored securely.
6. Full containers should not wait indefinitely
Overfilled or long-stored medical waste creates avoidable safety and hygiene risks.
7. Staff training prevents mistakes
Simple training on waste types, fill lines and storage areas reduces unsafe handling.
8. Cheap service can become expensive
Missed collections, poor communication and wrong containers can cost more than a proper setup.
9. Collection is only one part of disposal
True medical waste disposal includes segregation, packaging, storage, collection, transport and treatment.
How MNE Waste Management helps
MNE Waste Management supplies medical waste containers and collection support for South African businesses that want a cleaner, safer and simpler waste process.
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