Infectious waste - definitions.

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(1) For the purposes of this part 4 and statewide applicability:

(a) "Infectious waste" means waste capable of producing an infectious disease and requires the consideration of certain factors necessary for induction of disease. These factors include:

  1. Presence of a pathogen of sufficient virulence;

  2. Dose;

  3. Portal of entry;(IV) Resistance of host.

(b) For a waste to be infectious, it must contain pathogens with sufficient virulence and quantity so that exposure to the waste by a susceptible host could result in disease. All the factors specified in paragraph (a) of this subsection (1) must be present simultaneously for disease transmission to occur and must be present in a manner which constitutes a substantial risk of infection to humans.

(2) (a) Infectious waste shall be designated as such by the generator in accordance with this part 4. Such designation shall not be based solely upon any source or type of waste but shall be based upon the factors specified in subsection (1) of this section.

(b) It is recommended by the general assembly that the following categories of waste, as published in the "EPA Guide for Infectious Waste Management", May 1986, by the United States environmental protection agency, be designated as infectious:

  1. Isolation wastes from persons diagnosed as having a disease caused by an organismrequiring, pursuant to recommendations by the centers for disease control in the 1988 publication "Biosafety in the Microbiological and Biomedical Laboratory" (second edition), biosafety level IV containment;

  2. Cultures and stocks of infectious agents and associated biologicals;

  3. Human blood and blood products and body fluids consisting of serum, plasma andother blood components, cerebrospinal fluid, synovial fluid, pleural fluid, peritoneal fluid, pericardial fluid, and amniotic fluid;

  4. Human pathological/anatomical waste consisting of tissues and body parts that arediscarded from surgical, obstetrical, autopsy, and laboratory procedures;

  5. Contaminated sharps;

  6. Contaminated laboratory or research animal carcasses, body parts, and bedding.

Source: L. 89: Entire part added, p. 1176, § 1, effective April 23.


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