1. Articles contaminated by patients' blood, body fluids and excreta, including:
Cotton balls, cotton swabs, drainage cotton strips, gauze and other dressings.
B disposable sanitary articles, disposable medical articles and disposable medical devices after use.
C, waste clothes;
D other articles contaminated by the patient's blood, body fluids and excreta;
2. Domestic garbage generated by medical institutions to isolate patients with infectious diseases or suspected patients with infectious diseases;
3, pathogen culture medium, all kinds of discarded medical specimens and strains, virus preservation solution;
4. Abandoned blood and serum.
Pathological wastes: human wastes and medical experimental animal carcasses produced in the process of diagnosis and treatment.
1, discarded human tissues, organs, etc. Produced during surgery and other diagnosis and treatment.
2. Tissue and corpse of medical experimental animals.
3. Abandoned human tissues and pathological wax blocks after pathological sectioning.
3. Hazardous waste: abandoned medical sharp weapon, which can stab or cut human body.
1, medical needle, suture needle.
2. Various medical sharp instruments, including scalpels, scalpels, skin-beautifying knives and surgical saws.
3. Slides, glass test tubes, glass ampoules, etc.
Four. Drug waste: abandoned, eliminated, deteriorated or contaminated drugs.
1. Abandoned general drugs, such as antibiotics and over-the-counter drugs.
2 abandoned cytotoxic drugs and genotoxic drugs, including:
A. Carcinogenic drugs, such as azathioprine, chlorambucil, naphthalene nitrogen mustard, cyclosporine, cyclophosphamide, nitrogen mustard amphetamine, smecta, tamoxifen, thiotepa, etc.
B drugs suspected of causing cancer, such as cisplatin, mitomycin, adriamycin and phenobarbital;
C. immunosuppressive agents.
3. Abandoned vaccines and blood products.
5. Chemical waste: toxic, corrosive, flammable and explosive waste chemicals.
1, chemical reagents discarded in medical imaging rooms and laboratories.
2. Waste chemical disinfectants such as peracetic acid and glutaraldehyde.
3. Abandoned mercury sphygmomanometer and mercury thermometer.