WHO HCWM Policy Paper 2004
WHO HCWM Policy Paper 2004
POLICY PAPER
1 - Unsafe health-care waste management leads to death and disability
Health-care activities lead to the production of waste that may lead to adverse health effects. Most of this waste is not more dangerous than regular household waste. However, some types of health-care waste represent a higher risk to health. These include infectious waste (15% to 25% of total health-care waste) among which are sharps waste (1%), body part waste (1%), chemical or pharmaceutical waste (3%), and radioactive and cytotoxic waste or broken thermometers (less than 1%). Sharps waste, although produced in small quantities, is highly infectious. Poorly managed, they expose healthcare workers, waste handlers and the community to infections. Contaminated needles and syringes represent a particular threat and may be scavenged from waste areas and dump sites and be reused. WHO has estimated that, in 2000, injections with contaminated syringes caused: 21 million hepatitis B virus (HBV) infections (32% of all new infections); two million hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections (40% of all new infections); 260 000 HIV infections (5% of all new infections). Epidemiological studies indicate that a person who experiences one needle-stick injury from a needle used on an infected source patient has risks of 30%, 1.8%, and 0.3% respectively to become infected with HBV, HCV and HIV. In 2002, the results of a WHO assessment conducted in 22 developing countries showed that the proportion of health-care facilities that do not use proper waste disposal methods ranges from 18% to 64%.
Standards: 0.1 ng TEQ/m3 (Toxicity Equivalence) in Europe to 0.1 ng to 5 ng TEQ/m3 in Japan according to incinerator capacity. August 2004
In several Western European countries where tight emissions restrictions were adopted in the late 1980s, dioxin and furan concentrations in many types of food (including breast milk) have decreased sharply. WHO has established tolerable intake limits for dioxins and furans, but not for emissions. The latter must be set within the national context.
5 Strategy
To better understand the problem of health-care waste management, WHO guidance recommends that countries conduct assessments prior to any decision as to which health-care management methods be chosen. Tools are available to assist with the assessment and decision-making process so that appropriate policies lead to the choice of adapted technologies. WHO proposes to work in collaboration with countries through the following strategies: Short-term Production of all syringe components made of the same plastic to facilitate recycling; selection of PVC-free medical devices; identification and development of recycling options wherever possible (e.g.: for plastic, glass, etc.); and research and promotion on new technology or alternative to small-scale incineration; Until countries in transition and developing countries have access to health-care waste management options that are safer to the environment and health, incineration may be an acceptable response when used appropriately. Key elements of appropriate operation of incinerators include effective waste reduction and waste segregation, placing incinerators away from populated areas, satisfactory engineered design, construction following appropriate dimensional plans, proper operation, periodic maintenance, and staff training and management. Medium-term Further efforts to reduce the number of unnecessary injections to reduce the amount of hazardous health-care waste that needs to be treated; research into the health effect of chronic exposure to low levels of dioxin and furan; and risk assessment to compare the health risks associated with: (1) incineration; and (2) exposure to health-care waste. Long-term Effective, scaled-up promotion of non-incineration technologies for the final disposal of health-care waste to prevent the disease burden from: (a) unsafe health-care waste management; and (b) exposure to dioxins and furans; support to countries in developing a national guidance manual for sound management of health-care waste; support to countries in the development and implementation of a national plan, policies and legislation on health-care waste; promotion of the principles of environmentally sound management of health-care waste as set out in the Basel Convention; and support to allocate human and financial resources to safely manage health-care waste in countries
Department of Protection of the Human Environment Water, Sanitation and Health 20 Avenue Appia, CH-1211 Geneva 27, Switzerland Fax: +41 22 791 4159. E-mail: [email protected] Additional information on health-care waste management: www.healthcarewaste.org