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Waste Management & Research, Vol. 26, No. 3, 291-296 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/0734242X07087661

Report: Healthcare waste characterization in Chittagong Medical College Hospital, Bangladesh

Md Maksud Alam

Institute of Forestry and Environmental Sciences, Chittagong University, Chittagong, Bangladesh

Mohammad Sujauddin

Institute of Forestry and Environmental Sciences, Chittagong University, Chittagong, Bangladesh

Gazi Mohammed Asif Iqbal

Institute of Forestry and Environmental Sciences, Chittagong University, Chittagong, Bangladesh

Syed Mohammed Shamsul Huda

Institute of Forestry and Environmental Sciences, Chittagong University, Chittagong, Bangladesh, hudaifescu{at}yahoo.com

Healthcare waste management (HCWM) options are inconsistent in Bangladesh. One of the first critical steps in the process of developing a reliable waste management plan requires a comprehensive understanding of the quantities and characteristics of the waste that needs to be managed. This study took into consideration both the quantity and quality of the generated waste to determine the generation rates and physical properties of healthcare waste (HCW) in Chittagong Medical College Hospital (CMCH) and also to estimate the amount of infectious and non-infectious waste generated in different wards. CMCH, the second largest hospital in Bangladesh, comprises 34 wards, 12 of which were selected randomly. Waste materials were collected from these wards and then segregated and weighed. Waste generation per day was found to be 73.22 kg/ward, 1.28 kg/bed and 0.57 kg/patient. A total of 2490 kg of HCW was produced each day in CMCH (37% being infectious and the rest being non-infectious waste). Infectious waste was 27.07 kg per ward, 0.47 kg per bed and 0.21 kg per patient and the non-infectious waste was 46.15 kg per ward, 0.81 kg per bed and 0.36 kg per patient per day. HCW comprised eight categories of waste materials with vegetable/food waste being the largest component (50.21%) and varied significantly (P < 0.05) among the 12 different wards studied. The greatest amount of HCW was recorded (154 kg) in Orthopaedics followed by 96.66 kg in the Medicine Unit-3 and the smallest amount was recorded in Casualty (8.79 kg). The amount of HCW was positively correlated with the number of occupied beds (rxy = 0.79, P < 0.01). There is no structured form of medical waste treatment in CMCH and most waste materials are dumped in open areas for natural degradation or re-sold by scavengers. It is essential to develop a national policy and implement a comprehensive action plan for HCWM that will provide environmentally sound technological measures to improve HCWM in Bangladesh.

Key Words: healthcare waste • waste generation • infectious waste • non-infectious waste • wmr 1338—9


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