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Potentially Infectious Medical Waste
What is Potentially
Infectious Medical Waste (PIMW)?
Items that are defined as PIMW are:
-
Sharps
-
Human blood and blood products
(includes liquid human blood, products of blood, items saturated
with blood, and items that were saturated with blood and are now
caked with blood.)
-
Cultures and stocks of human cell lines and
items containing human cell lines
- Cultures and
stocks of
infectious agents
- Animal waste
including carcasses, body parts and bedding of animals that were
known to have been exposed to
infectious agents during research
- Items
contaminated with blood from animals that were known to have
been exposed to
infectious agents during research
Who determines the PIMW definition?
The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (IEPA)
specifically regulates the packaging and disposal of PIMW
waste and defines such waste through the
Illinois Pollution Control Board. Specifically, PIMW rules are
found in:
Title 35: Environmental Protection
Subtitle M: Biological Materials
Chapter I: Pollution Control Board
Subchapter v: Potentially Infectious Medical Waste
You can view the regulations in
Microsoft
Word or
Acrobat
PDF formats.
How does this apply to me as a biological waste
generator?
As a generator, it is necessary to understand what items are and
are not PIMW for two reasons.
First, it is necessary to segregate PIMW items and non-PIMW
items for disposal through CEHS. The IEPA
specifically regulates the packaging and disposal of PIMW
waste and requires CEHS to report the amount of PIMW generated by
the campus annually. Employees of CEHS
are not able to identify PIMW waste by looking at it, so if
generators do not segregate their waste, CEHS can not provide the
IEPA with an accurate assessment of the amount of PIMW generated
at SIUC.
Second, identifying what items are PIMW increases the level
of safety for generators and CEHS employees who collect the waste,
by giving them the ability to know what precautions to take in
handling the waste and also giving them the ability to respond
appropriately to a spill if such an incident should happen.
Definition of an
infectious agent: Any organism (such as a virus or
bacteria) that is capable of being communicated by invasion and
multiplication in body tissues and capable of causing disease or
adverse health impacts in humans.
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