It is usually landfilled or incinerated.
What are the common items or wastes of pharmaceutical medical waste
According to the Ministry of Health, the former State Environmental Protection Administration jointly issued the "Classification Catalog of Medical Waste", pharmaceutical medical waste mainly includes: First, discarded general medicines, such as: antibiotics, over-the-counter medicines, etc.; Second, discarded cytotoxic and genotoxic medicines, including: 1. carcinogenic drugs, such as azathioprine Carcinogenic drugs, such as azathioprine, phenylbutyric acid nitrogen mustard, naphthyl nitrogen mustard, cyclosporine, cyclophosphamide, phenylpropanoid nitrogen mustard, simustine, triamcinolone acetonide, thiotepa, etc.; 2. Suspected carcinogenic drugs, such as: cisplatin, mitomycin, adriamycin, phenobarbital, etc.; 3. Immunosuppressants. Third, discarded vaccines, blood products and so on.
Pharmaceutical waste can not be more than a good many pounds3
The kind of children in the children do not get the right to inherit the estate of the youngest son, often through their own struggle to get a good development. Those who sit on their hands, on the other hand, seldom make a great success. --Bacon
How is medical waste handled?
The disposal procedure consists of disfiguring and sterilizing the waste before packing it for incineration.
It is now changed to separate storage and centralized storage for disinfection and sterilization.
Using a variety of methods ingots in addition to incineration, there are steaming method, dry heat sterilization method, chemical treatment, microwave treatment, electronic gas pedal and other methods.
Principles of infectious waste treatment
From the generation of medical waste; classification and collection; warning labels; closed packaging and transportation, storage, environmentally sound disposal of the entire process to implement the whole process of strict control. 1, the definition of medical waste: refers to medical and health institutions in medical prevention, health care and other related activities with direct or indirect infectious, toxic and other hazardous waste. Including: (1) infectious waste (2) pathological waste (3) injurious waste (4) pharmaceutical waste (5) chemical waste 2, laboratory waste: mainly infectious waste, including: (1) laboratory cultures, may be the source of contamination of the specimens sent for examination (such as blood, various body fluids, fecal matter); (2) in the collection of specimens and infected patients with contact with the tissues (swabs) and other items; (3) stained with human tissue or liquid sharps (such as needles, infusion sets, scalpels, knives, razor blades, scissors and broken glass and other waste), accounting for a large proportion of medical waste, is one of the most important medical waste.