Tenn. Comp. R. & Regs. 1200-08-15-.10 - INFECTIOUS AND HAZARDOUS WASTE
(1) Each
residential hospice must develop, maintain and implement written policies and
procedures for the definition and handling of its infectious and hazardous
wastes. These policies and procedures must comply with the standards of this
section and all other applicable state and federal regulations.
(2) The following waste shall be considered
to be infectious waste:
(a) Waste
contaminated by patients/residents who are isolated due to communicable
disease, as provided in the U.S. Centers for Disease Control "Guidelines for
Isolation Precautions in Hospitals";
(b) Cultures and stocks of infectious agents
including specimen cultures collected from medical and pathological
laboratories, cultures and stocks of infectious agents from research and
industrial laboratories, wastes from the production of biologicals, discarded
live and attenuated vaccines, culture dishes and devices used to transfer,
inoculate, and mix cultures;
(c)
Waste human blood and blood products such as serum, plasma, and other blood
components;
(d) All discarded
sharps (including but not limited to, hypodermic needles, syringes, pasteur
pipettes, broken glass and scalpel blades) used in patient/resident care or
which have come into contact with infectious agents during use in medical,
research, or industrial laboratories;
(e) Other waste determined to be infectious
by the facility in its written policy.
(3) Infectious and hazardous waste must be
segregated from other waste at the point of generation (i.e., the point at
which the material becomes a waste) within the facility.
(4) Waste must be packaged in a manner that
will protect waste handlers and the public from possible injury and disease
that may result from exposure to the waste. Such packaging must provide for
containment of the waste from the point of generation up to the point of proper
treatment or disposal. Packaging must be selected and utilized for the type of
waste the package will contain, how the waste will be treated and disposed, and
how it will be handled and transported, prior to treatment and disposal.
(a) Contaminated sharps must be directly
placed in leakproof, rigid, and puncture-resistant containers which must then
be tightly sealed;
(b) Whether
disposable or reusable, all containers, bags, and boxes used for containment
and disposal of infectious waste must be conspicuously identified. Packages
containing infectious waste which pose additional hazards, including but not
limited to, chemical and radiological must also be conspicuously identified to
clearly indicate those additional hazards;
(c) Reusable containers for infectious waste
must be thoroughly sanitized each time they are emptied, unless the surfaces of
the containers have been completely protected from contamination by disposable
liners or other devices removed with the waste; and,
(d) Opaque packaging must be used for
pathological waste.
(5)
After packaging, waste must be handled and transported by methods ensuring
containment and preserving the integrity of the packaging, including the use of
secondary containment where necessary.
(a)
Waste must not be compacted or ground (i.e., in a mechanical grinder) prior to
treatment, except that pathological waste may be ground prior to disposal;
and,
(b) Plastic bags of infectious
waste must be transported by hand.
(6) Waste must be stored in a manner which
preserves the integrity of the packaging, inhibits rapid microbial growth and
putrefaction, and minimizes the potential of exposure or access by unknowing
persons. Waste must be stored in a manner and location which affords protection
from animals, precipitation, wind, direct sunlight, does not present a safety
hazard, does not provide a breeding place or food source for insects or rodents
and does not create a nuisance.
(7)
In the event of spills, ruptured packaging, or other incidents where there is a
loss of containment of waste, the facility must ensure that proper actions are
immediately taken to:
(a) Isolate the area
from the public and non-essential personnel;
(b) To the extent practicable, repackage all
spilled waste and contaminated debris in accordance with the requirements of
this section;
(c) Sanitize all
contaminated equipment and surfaces appropriately and in accordance with
written policies and procedure; and,
(d) Complete an incident report and maintain
a copy on file.
(8)
Except as provided otherwise in this section, a facility must treat or dispose
of infectious waste by one or more of the methods specified in this part.
(a) A facility may treat infectious waste in
an on-site sterilization or disinfection device, or in an incinerator or a
steam sterilizer, which has been designed, constructed, operated and maintained
so that infectious waste treated in such a device is rendered non-infectious
and is, if applicable, authorized for that purpose pursuant to current rules of
the Department of Environment and Conservation. A valid permit or other written
evidence of having complied with the Tennessee Air Pollution Control
Regulations shall be available for review, if required. Each sterilizing or
disinfecting cycle must contain appropriate indicators to assure conditions
were met for proper sterilization or disinfection of materials included in the
cycle, and records kept. Proper operation of such devices must be verified at
least monthly, and records of these monthly checks shall be available for
review. Waste that contains toxic chemicals that would be volatilized by steam
must not be treated in steam sterilizers. Infectious waste that has been
rendered to a carbonized or mineralized ash shall be deemed non-infectious,
unless otherwise hazardous and subject to the hazardous waste management
requirements of the current rules of the Department of Environment and
Conservation, such ash shall be disposable as a (non-hazardous) solid waste
under current rules of the Department of Environment and
Conservation.
(b) The facility may
discharge liquid or semi-liquid infectious waste to the collection sewerage
system of a wastewater treatment facility which is subject to a permit pursuant
to T.C.A. §
69-3-101, et seq., provided that
such discharge is in accordance with any applicable terms of that permit and/or
any applicable municipal sewer use requirements.
(c) Any health care facility accepting waste
from another state must promptly notify the Department of Environment and
Conservation, county, and city public health agencies, and must strictly comply
with all applicable local, state and federal regulations.
(9) The facility may have waste transported
off-site for storage, treatment, or disposal. Such arrangements must be
detailed in a written contract, available for review. If such off-site location
is in Tennessee, the facility must ensure that it has all necessary state and
local approvals, and such approvals shall be available for review. If the
off-site location is in another state, the facility must notify in writing all
public health agencies with jurisdiction that the location is being used for
management of the facility's waste. Waste shipped off-site must be packaged in
accordance with applicable federal and state requirements. Waste transported to
a sanitary landfill in this state must meet the requirements of current rules
of the Department of Environment and Conservation.
(10) All garbage, trash and other
non-infectious waste shall be stored and disposed of in a manner that shall not
permit the transmission of disease, create a nuisance, provide a breeding place
for insects and rodents, or constitute a safety hazard. All containers for
waste shall be water tight, constructed of easily-cleanable material and shall
be kept on elevated platforms.
Notes
Authority: T.C.A. §§ 4-5-202, 68-11-202, 68-11-204, 68-11-206, and 68-11-209.
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