Health Care Waste Management

HCWMOn September 2014, IAPHL members discussed best practices for the management of hazardous waste. This conversation was facilitated by Scott Ackerson of SCMS, Kasra Mofarah of Pharmacie et aide Humanitaire, Victoria Masembe of The AIDS Support Technical Assistance Resources, and Nancy Muller of PATH.  The discussion consisted of three parts, covering topics such as policies & procedures, efficient forecasting & procurement, generation & storage, transfer & transport, treatment & disposal, and quality management systems.

Selected comments from IAPHL members:

To ensure proper management, a successful HCWM plan should: 

Examples of nationals policy and guidelines:
1. Kanya National policy on injection safety: 
http://www.path.org/files/Kenya-NationalPolicyoninjection.pdf

2. Swaziland national guidelines on health care waste management: 
http://scms.pfscm.org/hcwm/docs/Swaziland%20National%20HCWM%20Guidelines.pdf“–Scott Ackerson “There is need for good policies and all but strong monitoring of the processes needs to also
be strenghtened.”–Rahman Olasunkanmi Kelani “The updated guidance follows WHO guidelines for management of infectious waste [in the context of the Ebola virus] but recommends more stringent precautions. These include:

These same precautions are recommended for aides, cleaners, and waste handlers. The Guidelines note that additional PPE, depending on performed tasks and risk assessment, may include:

“To support the sustainability of standards, an appropriate Quality Management System (QMS) should be developed and implemented. A QMS will provide a framework through which the hospital or health care facility can monitor and continuously improve all aspects of their environmental hygiene system. A QMS is meant to empower its employees to strengthen their environmental hygiene system and increase safety within their work processes and work environment.”– Scott Ackerson “Lessons Learned [in the Ebola House to House campaign strategy]:

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