Wisconsin
Medical/Infectious Waste
Waste Categories
- Infectious
waste means solid waste that contains pathogens with
sufficient virulence and in sufficient quantity that exposure
of a susceptible human or animal to the solid waste could cause
the human or animal to contract an infectious disease.
- Medical
waste means infectious waste and other waste
that contains or may be mixed with infectious waste.
Medical waste does not mean all of the
waste produced in a medical setting. Waste materials from a
medical setting which do not
meet the definition of “infectious waste” in statutes
are considered to be “medical waste” only if the generator
mixes them with infectious waste or manages them as though they
are infectious waste.
Definition of Infectious Medical Waste
The following solid wastes are presumed
to be infectious waste unless methods of testing which are generally
accepted by the medical profession demonstrate that the waste
is not infectious:
- Sharps,
including contaminated sharps which are both infectious and
may easily cause punctures or cuts in the skin, including but
not
limited to: hypodermic needles, syringes with needles attached,
scalpel blades, lancets, broken glass vials, broken rigid plastic
vials and laboratory slides, and unused or disinfected sharps
which are being discarded, including hypodermic needles, scalpel
blades, lancets and syringes with needles attached;
- Bulk
blood and body fluids from humans;
- Microbiological
laboratory waste; and
- Tissue,
bulk blood or body fluids from an animal, which is carrying
a zoonotic infectious agent.
Solid wastes presumed
not to be infectious wastes include the following:
- Items
soiled but not saturated with blood or body fluids from
humans included in the definition of bulk blood and body fluids
- Items
soiled with body fluids from humans not included in the
definition of bulk blood and body fluids;
- Intravenous
tubing after needles have been detached;
- Tissue,
blood, body fluids or cultures from an animal which is
not known to be carrying or experimentally infected with a zoonotic
infectious
agent;
- Animal
manure and bedding;
- Other
solid wastes, including but not limited to containers,
packages, waste glass, laboratory equipment and other materials
which have
had no contact with blood, body fluids, clinical cultures
or infectious agents. When possible, use of these items shall
be
reduced, and the items shall be reused or recycled; and
- Formerly
infectious waste, after it has been treated according
to the regulations.
Managing Infectious Medical Waste
Source separation
- Infectious
waste may not be mixed in the same bag or waste receptacle with
solid waste, which is not infectious waste, unless mixing the
wastes is necessary to protect the health or safety of patients,
employees or other persons.
- No
person may separate infectious waste from solid waste,
which is not infectious waste, unless adequate measures are taken
to
protect waste handlers and other persons from exposure.
After separation, solid waste previously mixed in the same bag
or waste
receptacle with infectious waste shall be managed as
infectious waste.
- No
person may remove solid waste or infectious waste that
has been placed in a bag or waste container labeled with the
biohazard
symbol, or fail to manage the waste as infectious waste
from the time of generation until the waste has been treated,
unless
the person follows waste management procedures which
will protect waste handlers and other persons from exposure.
- No
person may transport solid waste and infectious waste
on the same cart or vehicle unless the wastes are in separate
and identifiable
bags or waste containers. If the wastes are transported
on any roads, transporter requirements apply.
Containment
No person may transport
infectious waste from the property where the waste was generated
unless
the waste is put in a container which protects waste
handlers and other persons from exposure to the infectious waste
and the
person meets all of the following requirements
- Sharps
shall be contained in rigid, punctureresistant labeled containers
made of materials including but not limited to metal or rigid
plastic, designed to prevent the loss of the contents and labeled
with a visible bio hazard emblem or with the visible words ‘biohazard,’ ‘sharps’ or ‘infectious
waste.’
- Infectious
waste other than sharps shall be contained according
to all of the following:
- The
waste shall be placed in a single plastic bag that
meets or exceeds 165 grams resistance by the ASTM method D170991 and is tear
resistant using method ASTM method D192289, or,
if necessary, a double bag that meets the same standards,
or a rigid reusable
container. Copies of the testing methods are available
for inspection at Department of Natural Resources,
the Secretary of State, or
the American Society for Testing and Materials.
- The
bag or rigid reusable container shall be securely
sealed to prevent leakage or expulsion of the contents under
normal
handling.
- Any
bag containing infectious waste shall be placed in
a rigid container, including but not limited to a corrugated
cardboard container,
a covered reusable container or a cart. The rigid container
shall be labeled with a visible biohazard emblem and the word ‘biohazard.’
Bulk containers shall be small enough to be handled
by a single person.
- All
reusable containers shall be disinfected after being emptied.
- No
person may open a secured container of infectious waste
which is ready for transportation until immediately before treating
the waste, unless repacking is necessary to prevent
spills or
leakage, or the person is conducting a waste audit
or training session.
Handling
No person may handle, load, unload,
process or treat infectious wastes unless adequate measures are
taken to protect waste handlers and other persons from exposure
to the infectious wastes and unless all of the following requirements
are met:
- All
containers shall be handled and transported to
prevent the loss or spilling of the contents.
- Nuisance
conditions shall be prevented from developing.
Appropriate measures shall be taken to prevent odors, including
but not limited
to
refrigerating the infectious waste below 42 ° Fahrenheit
until treated.
- All
infectious waste shall be loaded and unloaded by
hand or by a safe mechanical method that does not damage containers
or
spill their contents.
- Untreated
infectious waste may not be compacted.
Storage and
Transfer
No
person may store infectious wastes unless the person protects
waste handlers and other persons from exposure to the infectious
waste and unless the following requirements are met:
- Storage
includes, but is not limited to the transfer
of infectious waste. Infectious waste generators may temporarily
accumulate
infectious waste in individual containers
near
the place where the waste was generated, prior to moving
the waste to an onsite
infectious waste storage facility
- No
person may operate or maintain an infectious
waste storage facility unless the person has obtained an operating
license
for storing solid waste and the storage facility
meets all the requirements for handling and storing infectious
waste.
Infectious
waste storage facilities that which meet any of the following
conditions are exempt from the requirement to obtain an operating
license and preparing a plan of operation, but shall meet the
minimum operating requirements for storing infectious waste:
- Storage
facilities that are located on the property
where the infectious waste is generated.
- Storage
facilities which are located on the property
where the infectious waste is generated and which accept infectious
waste from offsite
generators, if the total quantity of infectious waste, including
items mixed with infectious waste, accepted from offsite is
less than the quantity generated onsite or less than 500 pounds
per month, whichever is less and if the waste is accepted on
a notforprofit and costonly basis
- Sharps
collection stations which comply with all requirements
- Storage
facilities for infectious waste, which is also,
is hazardous waste, provided that the storage facility is regulated.
Plan of Operation
No
person may establish or construct an infectious waste storage
facility or expand an existing facility unless the person has
obtained a plan of operation approval from the department or
unless the facility is exempt from licensing requirement.
Minimum Requirements
for the Storage of Infectious Waste
No
person may operate or maintain an infectious waste storage
facility unless the storage area meets all of the following
requirements:
- The
storage area shall be kept clean and be impermeable
to liquids. Carpeted areas or wooden floors may not be used in
storage
areas.
- The
storage area designated for infectious waste
may contain only infectious wastes and their containers. The
storage area may
be an area designated within a room.
- The
storage area is in an enclosed building,
container or vehicle so that the infectious waste is not exposed
to weather.
- Access
to the storage area shall be limited to authorized personnel.
- Nuisance
conditions shall be prevented from developing.
- If
the infectious waste is to be treated offsite,
the operator of the infectious waste storage
facility shall relinquish the
infectious waste only to a licensed infectious
waste transporter or to a person exempt from
licensing.
- The
containers of infectious waste shall be
removed and emptied as necessary, but at least every 90 days.
- Thw
operator of the infectious waste storage
facility shall keep records of how much and where the infectious
waste has been
sent offsite. Records may consist of any of the following:
copies of infectious waste manifests, invoices, logs or other
written documentation of the amount of infectious waste sent
offsite for treatment.
Requirements
for Sharps Collection Stations
No
person may operate or maintain a sharps collection station
unless the person complies with all of the following requirements:
- Sharps
and sharps containers are only accepted from
infectious waste generators, each of which generates less than
50 pounds of
sharps per month, including items that may
be mixed with the sharps.
- The
service is provided on a notforprofit and costonly basis.
- No
more than 500 pounds of infectious waste
in the sharps collection station is stored at any one time.
- All
applicable requirements are complied with.
- The
sharps collection station is registered with the department
- The department is immediately notified in writing
if the sharps collection station moves or ceases to operate.
Transportation
and Shipping
No
person may transport or ship infectious
waste in Wisconsin unless adequate measures
are taken to protect waste handlers, the
public and the environment from exposure to the infectious waste,
and all of the following
requirements are met:
- No
person may transport infectious waste or
operate or maintain an infectious waste transportation service
unless the person
has obtained an infectious waste transportation
license for each vehicle and complies with both the minimum transportation
and operating requirements for licensed infectious waste transporters.
- Persons
who meet any of the following conditions
are exempt from licensing under this section, but shall meet
the minimum requirements
for transporting infectious waste:
- Infectious
waste is transported only on private
roads on the same property where the infectious waste was
generated and using vehicles
owned or leased by the infectious waste generator.
- Less
than 50 pounds of infectious is transported
per calendar month.
- Persons
operating vehicles owned or leased by
the United States postal service and handling infectious waste
sent through the mail.
- Persons
operating vehicles owned by a parcel
carrier service for which infectious waste constitutes an incidental
portion of the carrier’s
business, if the infectious waste is
handled in accordance with all applicable state and federal regulations.
- Persons
transporting infectious waste through
Wisconsin who are not stopping to collect, drop off or transfer
the infectious waste,
and who handle the infectious waste
in accordance with all applicable state and federal regulations.
- Persons
transporting infectious waste that is
also a hazardous waste, provided that the transportation is regulated.
Minimum Requirements for Transporting Infectious Waste
No person may transport infectious waste unless all of the following minimum requirements are met:
- The
infectious waste shall be contained and
handled according to all applicable requirements.
- The
vehicle used to transport the infectious
waste shall meet all of the following requirements:
- The
portion of the vehicle where the
infectious waste is contained shall be completely enclosed
to prevent littering,
spillage
or leakage. The enclosed portion
shall be leakresistant, if
necessary, considering the type of waste and its moisture content.
Rolloff boxes or dumpsters may not
be used to transport infectious waste.
- The
vehicle shall be maintained in good repair.
- The
vehicle shall be cleaned as frequently as necessary to prevent
nuisances.
- Nuisance
conditions shall be prevented from developing.
The
person shall transport the infectious
waste only to licensed solid waste
facilities that store or treat infectious
waste, or exempt from licensing or other requirements. Other
transportation
regulations, such as federal department
of transportation standards, may also apply.
Operating
Requirements for Licensed Infectious Waste Transporters
Infectious
waste transporters that are required to be licensed shall comply
with all the following requirements, in addition to other applicable
rules:
- Each
vehicle shall have ‘WDNR’ followed by the infectious waste
transportation license number lettered on the driver’s and
passenger’s doors. The letters
shall be at least 2 inches high
with a minimum of 1/2 inch brush
stroke. The lettering shall contrast
with the background so it is easy
to read.
- Vehicles
or containers used for the collection
or transportation of infectious waste shall be durable and easy
to clean.
- Each
vehicle hauling infectious waste
shall carry a written contingency plan for spills and accidents
and shall carry tools and materials
sufficient to implement the contingency
plan. In case of spill or accident, the driver shall implement
the contingency plan
immediately after spillage occurs.
- The
portion of the vehicle where the
infectious waste is placed shall be cleaned and disinfected
before hauling materials other
than infectious waste, solid waste
or supplies related to managing waste.
- The
person transporting the infectious
waste shall sign all manifests which accompany the infectious
waste, even if the waste is
exempt from manifesting, and deliver
the manifests to the next person who handles the waste.
- If
infectious waste is not accompanied
by an infectious waste manifest, the person transporting the
waste shall initiate
an infectious waste manifest for
that waste, unless the person transporting the waste hauls
less than 50 pounds of unmanifested
infectious waste per month.
Licensed
infectious waste transporters shall notify the department in
writing of all significant changes in service, including adding
or replacing a vehicle, changing the destination to which the
infectious waste is hauled, expanding the service area into
another county, or terminating service.
Treatment
Methods
No
person may dispose of infectious waste in a solid waste disposal
facility unless the infectious waste has undergone treatment
that effectively renders the waste noninfectious. The treatment
method shall be chosen by considering the properties of the
waste being treated and the degree of microbial contamination.
The
treatment method may also need to
comply with air standards for control of
hazardous pollutants, and with state
or federal regulations for wastewater and occupational health
and safety. All infectious
waste shall be treated by one or
more of the following infectious waste treatment methods:
- Incineration;
- Steam
disinfection;
- Chemical
disinfection;
- Mechanical
grinding and chemical disinfection;
- Mechanical
grinding and heat disinfection;
- Gas
disinfection; and
- Other
treatment methods and processes
that render the waste noninfectious
and shall be appropriate with respect to all of the following:
the properties of the waste being disinfected, the manufacturer’s
recommended use of the disinfectant,
the cleanliness of the surface
of the waste, the contact time,
the physical properties
of the waste, the concentration
of the disinfectant and the degree
of microbial contamination.
The
following infectious wastes must be treated as follows:
- Human
tissue shall be treated by
methods which render the tissue both noninfectious and unrecognizable
as human tissue, or incineration, where the tissue is transformed
into an ash which
would not be recognized as being from a human being.
- Animal
tissue known to be carrying
or experimentally infected with a zoonotic infectious agent
shall
be treated by methods which
render the tissue noninfectious,
incineration, burial on the land
on which the animal was kept,
or rendering or other methods
which incorporate the animal
into a consumer product in accordance
with all other applicable state
and federal regulations. Note: For
animals and animal waste used
in HIV and HbV research, refer
to OSHA bloodborne pathogen standard.
- Sharps
shall be treated by a method
which both renders the sharp noninfectious
and renders the sharp broken and not able to be reused, such
as by a grinding or shredding process, or incineration.
- Bulk
blood shall be treated by biological
treatment in an approved or permitted municipal or industrial
wastewater treatment facility
(bulk blood may be transported
to the wastewater treatment facility through the sewer
system), methods which render the
blood noninfectious, or incineration.
- Body
fluids and bloodcontaminated
urine and feces shall be treated
by any approved methods or by disposal in a septic system.
Treatment
Facilities
No
person may operate or maintain an infectious waste treatment
facility unless they have obtained an operating license as
a solid waste processing facility and the facility meets all
applicable requirements for containing, handling, storing and
treating infectious waste.
Records and
Infectious Waste Manifests
All
infectious waste generators shall keep records of the amount
of infectious waste sent offsite for treatment. Records may
consist of any of the following: copies of infectious waste
manifests, invoices or records received from the infectious
waste treatment facility, logs or other written documentation
of the amount of infectious waste sent offsite for treatment.
These records shall be kept for at least 3 years after they
were created. If the 3year period expires during an unresolved
enforcement action, the period is automatically extended until
resolution of the pending enforcement action.
No
person may store, transfer, transport
or treat infectious waste beyond the property where the waste
was generated unless the
waste is accompanied by
an infectious waste manifest.
The infectious waste manifest may either be a Wisconsin infectious
waste manifest form supplied
by the department or an alternative manifest form.
After
an infectious waste manifest
has been initiated, all persons who store, transfer,
transport or treat the waste
shall sign the infectious waste manifest form provided by the
DNR, even if the infectious waste
generator is exempt from manifesting,
and shall deliver the infectious waste manifest form to the next
person who handles
the waste.
The
following persons are exempt from record keeping and manifest
requirements:
- Home
generators of infectious waste; and
- Owners
and operators of sharps collection stations.
The
following persons are exempt from the requirements to use infectious
waste manifests, but shall follow the requirement for keeping
records:
- An
infectious waste generator
transporting infectious waste only on private roads on the
same property where the infectious
waste was generated and
using vehicles owned or leased by the infectious waste generator
or
by one of the generators in the
group.
- An
infectious waste generator
transporting less than 50 pounds per calendar month of
untreated infectious waste away from
the property where the
waste was initially generated, including items which are mixed
with
the infectious waste.
- Infectious
waste generators located
on the same property who manage their infectious waste
together and who, as a group, transport less
than 50 pounds per calendar
month of untreated infectious waste away from the property.
The
infectious waste manifest form shall include all of the following
information:
- The
place of origin of the infectious
waste, including the name, address, telephone number, and name
of contact person and type
of facility where the infectious
waste was generated, including but not limited to: hospitals,
clinics, nursing homes, sharps
collection stations and other facilities.
- The
route for the infectious
waste, including the name, address, telephone number, license
number and name of contact person
for any and all persons
storing, transporting or treating the infectious waste beyond
the location where the infectious waste
was generated.
- The
destination for disposal
of the treated infectious waste, including the name, address,
telephone number, solid waste disposal facility
license number and name of a contact person.
- The
composition of the infectious
waste, including the type or types of infectious waste.
- The
quantity of the infectious
waste, including both the number of containers and the total
weight, whether known or estimated,
of infectious waste including
waste which is mixed with the infectious waste.
- The
signature of an authorized
representative of each facility or licensed transporter handling
the waste from generation
through treatment.
Retention
of Infectious Waste Manifests and Related Records
Infectious
waste manifests and related records shall be retained as follows:
- The
infectious waste
generator shall retain the original infectious waste manifest,
and the
certification of infectious waste treatment
for at least 3 years
after the waste has been treated, and provide the department
copies
of manifests upon request. If
the 3year period
expires during an
unresolved enforcement
action, the period
is automatically
extended until resolution
of the pending enforcement
action. Note: Hospitals,
clinics and nursing
homes should keep
records for at least
5 years.
- Each
licensed infectious
waste transporter and each
owner or operator
of a storage or transfer
facility, combustor,
incinerator or
infectious waste treatment facility
which handles
or disinfects
infectious waste
shall retain a copy of
each manifest
for at least 3 years.
Infectious
Waste Annual Reports
An
infectious waste generator who is either required to use manifests
under or to submit progress
reports on medical waste reduction shall submit an annual report
to the department on a form supplied
by the department and the annual filing fee for the report.
Infectious
waste generators who manifest infectious waste as a group may
choose to submit a single annual report on behalf of the group
and which is signed by a representative of each generator in
the group.
Except
as required, the annual report shall be submitted by March
1 foractivities performed during the preceding calendar year.
The annual report shall contain the information on the departments
form and shall be signed by the administrator or chief executive
officer of the infectious waste generator.
Medical Waste
Reduction Plan
Unless
exempt, medical facilities are required to prepare a medical
waste reduction plan and implement policies which will do all
of the following:
- Reduce
the amount of medical waste generated by medical facilities;
- Prevent
the mixing of infectious waste with non-infectious waste;
- Promote
practical alternatives
to disposable items in medical facilities; and
- Maintain
effective waste reduction programs.
The
medical waste generator must ensure the medical waste reduction
plan is prepared property, annually assess the plan and results
annually, update the plan at least every 5 years, and keep
a copy of the current plan and have it available for DNR review
upon request.
The
plan must include training of employees in waste management
policies, practices and procedures for medical and other wastes
generated, and an audit of the medical facility’s current solid
waste management practices.
OSHA Regulations
HERC OSHA State Page
In
addition to the state medical waste environmental regulations
there
are some Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)
rules that apply to medical/infectious waste. Wisconsin
is one of 26 states covered entirely by the federal OSHA program. This
program is operated by the Occupational
Safety and Health Administration . OSHA rules (Occupational
Exposure to Bloodborne Pathogens Standards) impact various
aspects of medical/infectious waste, including management of
sharps, requirements for containers that hold or store medical/infectious
waste, labeling of medical/infectious waste bags/containers,
and employee training. These requirements can be found
in the HERC section entitled OSHA Standards for Regulated
Waste
Statutes,
Regulations and Guidelines
Wisconsin
Administrative Codes Pertaining to Medical and Infectious Waste
Contacts
Wisconsin Department
of Natural Resources
More Information
Wisconsin DNR – Waste Management
Program Medical/Infectious Waste
Medical Waste
Publications
|