A study on biomedical waste management in the healthcare sector. A pathway towards sustainability
Keywords:
biomedical waste management, sharps, hospital staff, sharps injuri, sustainability, awareness, knowledgeAbstract
The present write-up deals with the determination of the awareness amongst the healthcare work force in a hospital setting – the awareness with regard to the biomedical waste management policy and practices. It also assesses their attitude and ways of behaving towards the biomedical waste management. The case-study is about the level of knowledge regarding needle-stick injury and its effect on personal as well as community health. A cross-sectional study was conducted using a questionnaire with the closed-ended multiple questions. It was distributed amongst the nurses, paramedics, doctors and the housekeeping staff of the hospitals that are located in South Delhi. The questionnaire was used to determine their knowledge regarding three themes of biomedical waste disposal, handling of the needle-stick injury and the status of vaccinations. The resulting answers were graded and the percentage of correct and incorrect answers for every particular question from all the participants was obtained.
It has been observed and noted that only approximately 41 percent of the nurses were knowledgeable, making them the lowest amongst the four categories of Staff. More knowledgeable however were the housekeeping and the paramedics. Amongst them, nearly 46 percent and 48 percent were aware. As anticipated, almost 72 percent of the doctors had good knowledge about the BMW management. Our overall finding is however that the level of awareness amongstthe hospital staff is of average level. The awareness, alertness and understanding are highly necessary in order to amend safer and efficient practices and lead our country to develop a greener and sustainable environment.
References
Bagali, S. S., Gowrishankar, B. S. & Bagali, S. S. (……..), “A Review on Biomedical Waste Management”, Waste Technology, vol. 9, No. 2, Pp. 1-5
Datta, P., Mohi, G., and Chander, J. (2018), “Biomedical waste management in India: Critical appraisal”, Journal of Laboratory Physicians, vol. 10, no. 01, Pp. 6-014
Hanumantha Rao, P. (2008), “Report: Hospital waste management—awareness andpractices: a study of three states in India”, Waste management and Research, vol. 26, no. 3, Pp. 97-303
Hasan, S. , Saeed, S. and Choudhary, P. (2015), “Biomedical waste management – a public health hazard: an overview of literature”, Malaya Journal of Biosciences, vol. 2, no.2, Pp. 143-148
Kumar, R., Gupta, A. K., Aggarwal, A. K., & Kumar, A. (2014), “A descriptive study on evaluation of bio-medical waste management in a tertiary care public hospital of North India”, Journal of Environmental Health Science and Engineering, vol. 12, Pp. 1-7.
Mastorakis, N. E., Bulucea, C. A., Oprea, T. A., Bulucea, C. A., and Dondon, P. (2010), “Environmental and health risks associated with biomedical waste management”, Development of Energy Environmental Economics, vol ….., Pp. 287-94.
Mastorakis, N. E., Bulucea, C. A., Oprea, T. A., Bulucea, C. A., & Dondon, P. (2011), “Holistic approach of biomedical waste management system with regard to health and environmental risks”, International Journal of Energy Environment, vol. 5, no. 3, pp. 309-318
Mathur, V., Dwivedi, S., Hassan, M. A., & Misra, R. P. (2011), “Knowledge, attitude, and practices about biomedical waste management among healthcare personnel: Across-sectional study”, Indian Journal of Community Medicine: Official Publication of Indian Association of Preventive & Social Medicine, vol. 3, no. 2, p. 143
Padmanabhan, K. K., and Barik, D. (2019), “Health hazards of medical waste and its disposal” in Energy from toxic organic waste for heat and power generation Woodhead Publishing, Pp. 99-118
Palwankar, P. V. and Singh, A. (2012), “Safety and measures for auxiliary staff associated with hospital waste disposal”, Indian Journal of Dental Sciences, vol. 4, No. 1
Pandit, N. A., Tabish, S. A., Qadri, G. J., & Mustafa, A. (2007), “Biomedical waste management in a large teaching hospital”, JK-practitioner, vol. 14, no. 1, Pp. 57-59
Pasupathi, P., Sindhu, S., Ponnusha, B. S. and Ambika, A. (2011), “Biomedical waste management for health care industry”, International Journal of Biomedical Research, vol. 2, no. 1, Pp. 472-486
Sharma, A., Sharma, V., Sharma, S., and Singh, P. (2013), “Awareness of biomedical waste management among health care personnel in Jaipur, India”, Oral Health Dental Management, vol. 12, no. 1, Pp. 32-40
Sharma, A. K. (1998), “Bio Medical Waste (Management and Handling) Rules”, Bhopal: Suvidha Law House, Pp. 50-70
Singh, A., Kumari, R., Wakhlu, A., Srivastava, K., Wakhlu, A., and Kumar, S. (2014), “Assessment of biomedical waste management in a government healthcare setting of North India”, International Journal of Health Sciences and Research, vol. 4, no. 11, Pp. 203-208.
Singh, R., Singh, K., and Singh, G. (2018), “A study of the biomedical waste management in a teaching hospital (NCMC and Hospital, Panipat)”, Journal of Dental Medical Science, vol. ……….
Tiwari, A. V., and Kadu, P. A. (2014), “Assessment of Biomedical waste management in Amravati (MS)”, I J E S R T, vol. ….., May
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.