Rhode
Island
Regulated Medical Waste
Definition of Regulated Medical Waste
Managing Infectious Medical Wastes
Contacts
Statutes, Regulations and Guidelines
More Information
Definition of Regulated
Medical Waste
Regulated medical waste
means a special category of solid waste that includes specific types
of medical waste subject to handling and tracking requirements. A
regulated medical waste is any waste, as defined in these regulations,
generated in the diagnosis, treatment, or immunization of human beings
or animals, in research pertaining thereto, or in the preparation
of human remains for burial or cremation, or in the production or
testing of biologicals, or in the development of pharmaceuticals. Regulated
medical wastes mixed with nonhazardous solid wastes must be considered
regulated medical wastes. The Following categories of medical wastes
are regulated medical waste:
- Cultures and stocks of infectious agents and
associated biologicals.
- Pathological wastes including tissues, organs,
and body parts that are removed during surgery or autopsy, or other
medial procedures.
- Human blood, body fluids and blood products.
- Sharps.
- Animal waste that are known to be contaminated with human pathogens.
- Isolation wastes including biological waste
and discarded materials contaminated with blood, excretion, exudates
or secretions from humans who are isolated to protect others from
certain highly communicable diseases or isolated animals known
to be infected with highly communicable diseases.
- Spill/cleanup material including any material
collected during or resulting from the cleanup of a spill of regulated
medical waste.
- Mixtures including any waste which is a mixture
of regulated medical waste and some other type of waste which is
neither radioactive nor a hazardous waste of a type other than
regulated medical waste.
Managing
Regulated Medical Waste
Registration
Veterinary facilities
must register with the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management
and obtain a regulated medical waste generator registration number. Details
of the registration process can be found in section 16 of DEM-DAH-MW-01-92. Also,
see "Generator Application Form" below under Additional Resources.
Identification
and Segregation
A person who generates
a medical waste within the State of Rhode Island must determine if
that waste is a regulated medical waste. Any wastes that contain
regulated medical waste mixed with general solid waste must be managed
as regulated medical wastes. Any regulated medical wastes which
meet the definition of "hazardous waste", or which are mixed with
hazardous wastes must be managed as hazardous waste in accordance
with the most current DEM Rules and Regulations for Hazardous Waste
Management.
Generators must segregate
regulated medical waste from the general waste stream to the maximum
extent practicable to ensure the special handling and treatment required
by these regulations. Separation from the general waste stream must
occur at the point at which the regulated medical waste is generated.
Packaging Requirements
Regulated medical waste
must be properly packaged to assure effective containment throughout
the handling, storage, transport, and treatment process. In addition
to the specific packaging and containment requirements for each category
of regulated medical waste, generators must ensure that all regulated
medical waste is placed in a container or containers that are rigid,
leak-resistant, impervious to moisture, of a strength sufficient
to prevent tearing or bursting under normal conditions of use and
handling and are sealed to prevent leakage during transport.
Materials for packaging
must be strong enough to remain intact during whatever type of handling,
storage, and transport the container may undergo. Mechanical compaction
of regulated medical waste must not be conducted prior to treatment
and/or disposal, unless the mechanical compaction and treatment are
part of a single, self-contained process that does not place employees
or the public at risk of exposure to untreated regulated medical
waste.
All sharps and unused
sharps, including sharps with residual fluids, must be packaged in
containers that are puncture-resistant. Sharps containers with openings
large enough to allow entry of any human hand must also be subject
to any additional physical and administrative controls necessary
to prevent access by the public during normal conditions of use.
In addition to the
general packaging and containment requirements for regulated medical
wastes, human blood and blood products and body fluids in quantities
greater than twenty cubic centimeters must be packaged in containers
that are break-resistant and tightly lidded or stoppered. The container
must identify the contents as regulated medical waste by displaying
the Universal Biohazard Symbol on the outside of the container.
Those regulated medical
wastes which are not sharps or fluids in bulk quantities must be
packaged in either rigid containers that are designed to be tightly
sealable or in plastic bags that meet the following requirements:
- The plastic bags must be impervious to moisture
and be tear-resistant;
- The plastic bags must be a distinctive red or
orange color, or clear. If a clear bag is used then the universal
biohazard symbol must be appropriately displayed on the bag;
- A container used on-site to hold regulated medical
waste must have either a red or orange plastic bag plainly visible;
or if a clear bag is used then the universal biohazard symbol must
be displayed on the container as well as on the bag.
Storage Requirements
The following
rules apply to the storage of RMW:
- RMW must be stored in
a manner and location which maintains the integrity of the packaging
and provides protection from flooding and from adverse weather
conditions. All areas used for the storage of regulated medical
waste must be constructed of finished materials that are impermeable
to moisture and capable of being easily maintained in a sanitary
condition.
- On-site storage areas
must be restricted to authorized personnel. Outdoor storage
areas, such as dumpsters, sheds, tractor trailers, or other storage
areas, that contain regulated medical waste must be securely
locked in order to prevent unauthorized access.
- Regulated medical waste
must be stored to prevent access by and does not provide a breeding
place or a food source for insects, rodents, or other animals.
- The storage area must
be clearly identified as containing regulated medical waste through
the posting of universal biohazard signs or signs containing
the words; MEDICAL WASTE or REGULATED MEDICAL WASTE.
- The regulated medical
waste must be maintained in a nonputrescent state. Total storage
of regulated medical waste must not exceed fifty pounds or the
average quantity of regulated medical waste generated over five
consecutive calendar days, whichever condition must allow storage
for the longer period of time.
- Regulated medical waste
must not be compacted, undergo grinding, or be subject to violent
mechanical stress on-site unless the regulated medical waste
has been treated prior to compaction, grinding, or other mechanical
stress; or, unless the compaction, grinding, or mechanical stress
and the treatment are part of a single, self-contained process
that does not place employees or the public at risk of exposure
to untreated regulated medical waste.
- Generators must notify
in writing all employees involved with the decontamination of
reusable containers for regulated medical wastes of the provisions
in Section 9.00 of Rhode Island Regulations DEM-DAH-MW-01-92.
- All non-rigid packaging
and inner liners used for the packaging of medical waste must
be managed as regulated medical waste and must not be reused.
- Any container used for
the storage and or transport of regulated medical waste and designated
for reuse once emptied, must be decontaminated after each use.
- If any container used
for the storage and/or transport of regulated medical waste is
for any reason not capable of being rendered free of contamination.
On-Site Transport
of Regulated Medical Waste
To ensure the safe
transport of regulated medical wastes within the generating facility,
generators must comply with the following requirements:
- The regulated medical waste must be properly
packaged to ensure containment of the waste and all containers
and packages containing regulated medical wastes must be sealed
to prevent leakage or spillage while in transport.
- The handling, transfer, and loading of packages
and containers of regulated medical wastes must be performed in
a manner that does not destroy the integrity of the packaging.
- Regulated medial waste will not be subjected
to violent mechanical stress during on-site transport.
- Wheeled carts will be used for the transport
of packages or containers of regulated medical wastes if these
packages or containers will be moved more than a short distance
or if these packages or containers cannot be easily handled by
one person regardless of the distance to be moved.
- Any regulated medical waste which is contained
in plastic bags will not be moved or transported in mechanical
devices, dumb waiters, or chutes, unless the chutes are designed
to prevent accumulation of wastes in corners and edges and are
lined with materials which can be easily cleaned.
- Carts used for the transport of packages and
containers or regulated medical wastes must be sturdy and will
be routinely cleaned and disinfected, and immediately cleaned and
disinfected after use if the cart has been contaminated by medical
waste.
- Items other than regulated medical waste must
not be placed in the same cart with regulated medical waste at
any point during on-site transportation.
Labeling and
Marking Regulated Medical Waste for Off-Site Transport
All containers used
for the packaging and containment of regulated medical wastes must
be labeled with the universal biological hazard symbol or must be
clearly labeled as containing regulated medical waste. In addition
all packages or containers which will be transported or offered for
transport off-site must meet the labeling and marking requirements
of the regulations.
Generators must label
each package or container of regulated medical waste wit a water-resistant
label affixed to or printed on the outside of the container. The
label must include the words "Medical Waste", or display the universal
biohazard symbol. Red plastic bags used as inner packaging need
not display a label.
Marking Requirements
Generators and intermediate
handlers must mark each package or container or regulated medical
waste according to the following marking requirements before the
waste transported or offered for transport off-site. Refer to the
State Department of Environmental Management Regulations (DEM-DAH-MW-01-92)
for specifics.
On-Site Treatment
and/or Destruction of Regulated Medical Waste
Generators are subject
to the requirements of all applicable State solid waste and air emission
regulations. Generators must notify in writing all employees involved
with on-site treatment and/or destruction of regulated medical wastes.
Generators that accept
regulated medical waste from other generators for treatment must
apply for a license.
Incineration. Generators
must keep an operating log at their incineration facility that includes
information pertaining to operation of the incineration facility. Generators
must retain the operating log for at least three years from the date
of the last entry in the log.
The owner or operator
of an on-site incinerator must prepare and submit copies of the on-site
incinerator report to the Rhode Island Department of Environmental
Management.
The report must be
submitted on the form provided in Appendix II of the Rhode Island
Regulation DEM-DAH-MW-01-92.
Steam Sterilization. A
steam sterilizer used to convert untreated regulated medical waste
into treated regulated medical waste must be operated in accordance
with the following requirements:
- The sterilizers must be dedicated for waste
only. They must be operated in accordance with the manufacturer's
specifications for waste in regard to time, temperature, pressure,
and capacity, provided that these specifications change the biological
character or composition of the regulated medical waste so as to
substantially reduce or eliminate its potential for causing disease.
- If no manufacturer's specifications for waste
exist, or if another combination of time, temperature, pressure
and capacity is used, such combination must be proven, on the basis
of thorough tests, to render the regulated medical waste treated.
- Regulated medical waste must be steam sterilized
in its primary container.
- Unless a steam sterilizer is equipped to continuously
monitor and record temperatures during the entire length of each
sterilization cycle, the operator of such sterilizer must affix
to the primary container temperature-sensitive tape which will
indicate when the desired temperature is reached.
- At least once during every forty hours of operation,
tests must be conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of the sterilization
process, including tests of the capacity of such process.
- At least once during ever forty hours of operation,
a sterilization unit must be evaluated to determine whether it
is operating properly with respect to temperature and pressure. A
log must be maintained recording the dates and results of such
evaluations and the dates of calibration. The log must be kept
for at least three years from the date of the last entry in the
log.
Alternative On-Site
Treatment. Any method or process other that incineration or
steam sterilization used by a generator for treatment and/or destruction
of regulated medical waste on-site must be approved by the Director
in accordance with Section 15.07 of
the regulations. Each generator must maintain records concerning
quantity, weight, date the waste was treated and/or destroyed,
results of required quality assurance. Records must be maintained
by the generator for a period of at least three years from the
date the waste was treated and destroyed.
Generator Requirements
for Off-Site Transportation of Regulated Medical Waste
Licensed Transporters. Generators
must use transporters who have been issued a Rhode Island Regulated
Medical Waste Transporter Permit number by the Rhode Island Department
of Environmental Management, except:
- Generators of fifty pounds or more of regulated
medical waste per calendar month
- Small quantity generators
- Shipments between generator's facilities
- Shipments of sharps through the U.S. Postal
Service and/or private courier service
Tracking Forms, Reporting and Recordkeeping. Generators
must prepare a tracking form for off-site shipment of RMW (see exceptions
above). Multi-page tracking forms can be obtained from Rhode
Island Department of Environmental Management, Office of Waste Management. The
generator must sign the certification statement on the tracking form,
obtain the signature of the initial transporter, and retain one of
copy of the form. Copies of the tracking forms must be retained
for at least three (3) years. See "Tracking Form Instructions" below
under Additional Resources.
Generators who are exempt from use of the tracking
form (e.g., small quantity generators) must maintain a shipment log
that contains shipment dates, quantity shipped, address of the destination
and the signature of an employee who is transporting the waste. The
log must be kept in the facility's records for at least three (3)
years and semiannual reports must be sent to the Rhode Island Department
of Environmental Management, Office of Waste Management. See "Small
Quantity Generator Report Form" below under Additional Resources.
OSHA Regulations
In addition to the state medical waste environmental
regulations there are some Occupational Safety and Health Administration
(OSHA) rules that apply to medical/infectious waste. Rhode Island
is one of 26 states covered entirely by the federal OSHA program. This
program is operated by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration. OSHA
rules (Occupational Exposure to Bloodborne Pathogens Standards) impact
various aspects of medical/infectious waste, including management
of sharps, requirements for containers that hold or store medical/infectious
waste, labeling of medical/infectious waste bags/containers, and
employee training. These requirements can be found in the VetCA section
entitled OSHA Standards for Regulated Waste.
Statutes, Regulations
and Guidelines
State of Rhode Island
and Providence Plantations Department of Environmental Management: Rules and
Regulations Governing the Generation, Transportation, Storage, Treatment,
Management and Disposal of Regulated Medical Waste in Rhode Island
Air Pollution
Control Regulation No. 39 Hospital/ Medical/ Infectious Waste Incinerators
Contacts
Rhode
Island Department of Environmental Management, Office of Waste
Management
More Information
Generator Application
Form
Small Quantity
Generator Report Form
Tracking
Form Instructions
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