Title: WASTE MANAGEMENT ISSUES FOR NEW ENGLAND HOSPITALS
1WASTE MANAGEMENT ISSUES FOR NEW ENGLAND HOSPITALS
HELATHCARE FACILITIES
- Presented by
- Larry Doucet, P.E., DEE
- To The
- ENVIRONMENTAL BUSINESS COUNCIL OF NEW ENGLAND
2WASTE MANAGEMENT ISSUES CONCERNS FACING
TODAYS HOSPITALSCONTROLS, COSTS COMPLIANCE
3WASTE MANAGEMENT, TREATMENT DISPOSAL
- KEY ISSUES CONCERNS FACING TODAYS HOSPITALS
- Higher Rising Costs
- Fewer Shrinking Options
- Increasing Compliance Difficulties
4WASTE MANAGEMENT, TREATMENT DISPOSAL
- 1. HIGHER RISING COSTS
- Uncontrolled Limitless
- Major Bottom-line Impacts
- No Capital Dollars for a Solution
5WASTE MANAGEMENT, TREATMENT DISPOSAL
- 2. FEWER SHRINKING OPTIONS
- a. Fewer Viable Treatment Technologies
- b. Fewer Off-site Disposal Vendors
- -- State Regional Monopolies
- -- Longer Transport Distances
6WASTE MANAGEMENT, TREATMENT DISPOSAL
- 3. INCREASING COMPLIANCE DIFFICULTIES
- a. Expanded EPA Compliance Audits
- b. JCAHO Environment Of Care Compliance
- c. On-going Off-site Disposal Liabilities
- d. Image Relations to Public, Patients Staff
7HOW AND WHEN DID THESE ISSUES CONCERNS ARISE?
8- 2005 MARKS THE 35 ANNIVERSARY
- OF MEDICAL WASTE EMERGENCE
- AS AN
- IMPORTANT ISSUE
- FOR HOSPITALS
- HEALTHCARE FACILITIES
9WASTE MANAGEMENT, TREATMENT DISPOSAL
- HOW DID THESE ISSUES EVOLVE?
- PRE-1970 MINIMAL REGULATIONS COSTS
- 1970 EPA ESTABLISHED CHANGES START
- 1970 - EARLY 80s
- Arab Oil Embargos (74 78)
- Infectious Waste As Hazardous (76,78
80-rcra) - APC Regulations (77-CAAA)
- Infectious Waste Guidelines (82 EPA Draft)
10WASTE MANAGEMENT, TREATMENT DISPOSAL
- HOW DID THESE ISSUES EVOLVE?
- EARLY 1980s MID-90s
- AIDS BECOMES THE MAIN FOCUS OF CONCERN
UNIVERSAL PRECAUTIONS BLOODBORNE PATHOGENS,
MED WASTE TRACKING ACT, ETC. - JCAHA STANDARDS DEFINE INFECTIOUS WASTE AS
HAZARDOUS WASTE (85) - BEACH WASHUPS DISPOSAL INCIDENCES (86-86)
- MED WASTE DISPOSAL INDUSTRY DEVELOPED
- DEVELOPMENT OF ALTERNATE TREATMENT TECHNOLOGIES
11WASTE MANAGEMENT, TREATMENT DISPOSAL
- HOW DID THESE ISSUES EVOLVE?
- MID-1990s 2005
- CLEAN AIR ACT AMENDMENTS SHUT INCINERATORS
- MED WASTE DISPOSAL INDUSTRY CONSOLIDATES
- ALTERNATE TREATMENT TECHNOLOGIES FADE OUT
12WASTE MANAGEMENT, TREATMENT DISPOSAL
- WHAT DOES THE FUTURE HOLD?
- OFF-SITE DISPOSAL MONOPOLIES?
- Seem to be Occurring
- If So, Cost Escalations Certain
- How High How Fast?
- VIABLE TREATMENT ALTERNATIVES?
- Hugh Decline in Numbers
- More than 190 of about 210 firms out of business
- Very few have as many as 5 years experience
- Questionable Long-Range Vendor Survivability?
13WASTE MANAGEMENT, TREATMENT DISPOSAL
- WHAT HAPPENS FROM HERE?
- Disposal Costs Increasingly Dominate
- Disposal Options Continually Decline
- Future Changes Remain Uncertain
- Continued Financial Difficulties For Many
Hospitals
14WASTE MANAGEMENT, TREATMENT DISPOSAL
- PRIMARY COST REDUCTION OPPORTUNITIES
- WASTE MANAGEMENT PROGRAM IMPROVEMENTS
- ON-SITE MEDICAL WASTE TREATMENT
- SHARED SERVICE, CENTRALIZED OR REGIONAL TREATMENT
FACILITY
15WASTE MANAGEMENT PROGRAM IMPROVEMENTS
OPTIMIZATION
- COST SAVINGS OPPORTUNITIES-
- REDUCED MEDICAL WASTE GENERATION RATES
- 50 or More Reduction Achievable
- REDUCED OFF-SITE DISPOSAL COSTS
- Reduced Volumes and/or On-Site Treatment
- INCREASED RECYCLING BENEFITS
- Increased Recycled Volumes Reduced General
Waste Volumes - OTHER COST SAVING AREAS
- -- Reduced Hazardous Waste Disposal Costs
- -- Reduced Overall OM Costs
- -- Averted Fines Citations
- -- Reduced Insurance Premiums
16 WASTE MANAGEMENT PROGRAM IMPROVEMENTS
OPTIMIZATION
- OTHER BENEFITS-
- Reduced Hazardous Material Use/Disposal
- Liability Containment Averted Fines
- Increased Operational Efficiencies
- Demonstrated Corporate Responsibility
- Positive Public Image
- Continuous Quality Improvements
17WASTE MANAGEMENT PROGRAM IMPROVEMENTS
OPTIMIZATION
- IMPLEMENTATION STEPS-
- 1. WASTE MANAGEMENT PROGRAM SURVEY ASSESSMENTS
- All Waste Streams, Practices Procedures
- Generation Rates Segregation Efficiencies
Adherence to PP - 2. IDENTIFY IMPROVEMENTS COST SAVINGS
OPPORTUNITIES - Identify/Evaluate Options Alternatives
- Volume/Generation Reduction Recycling/Reuse Haz
Waste/Material Reduction Etc. - Set Goals Establish Milestone Progress Targets
- 3. IMPLEMENT PROGRAM IMPROVEMENTS
- New/Revised Policies, Procedure Program Manuals
- Employee/Staff Training
- 4. PROGRAM ADMINISTRATION OVERSIGHT
- 5. MONITORING FOLLOW-UP
18WASTE MANAGEMENT PROGRAM IMPROVEMENTS
OPTIMIZATION
- HOW MUCH MEDICAL WASTE IS GENERATED
- IN A TYPICAL HOSPITAL?
- SURVEY DATA
- SURVEYED FACILITIES
- 129 Hospitals Nationwide _at_ 43,000 Beds (Randomly
Selected) - 240 Million Lb/Yr Total Waste 46 Million Lb/Yr
Red Bag Waste - SURVEY RESULT SUMMARY
- Red Bag Waste Generation Range 0.10 to 92.7
- Red Bag Waste Generation Average 19.5
- 77 of Facilities Outside of 10 to 15 Range
19WASTE MANAGEMENT PROGRAM IMPROVEMENTS
OPTIMIZATION
- WHY SUCH A LARGE DEVIATION?
- UNINTENTIONAL
- Mismanagement
- Regulatory Misinterpretations
- Unfamiliarity of Alternatives
- INTENTIONAL
- Rational Analyses
- Comparison of On-Site vs. Off-Site Options
20WASTE MANAGEMENT PROGRAM IMPROVEMENTS
OPTIMIZATION
- FACTORS AFFECTING INDIVIDUAL HOSPITAL WASTE
GENERATION RATES- - 1. Regulatory Definitions
- 2. Regulatory Interpretations
- 3. Waste Management Policies Protocols
- 4. Waste Management Practices Efficiencies
- 5. Hauler/Disposal Restrictions
21MEDICAL WASTE TREATMENT DISPOSAL ALTERNATIVES
- TREATMENT DISPOSAL OPTIONS
- Off-Site Contract Disposal
- On-Site Treatment
- Shared-Service, Centralized or Regional Facility
- ALTERNATIVE TREATMENT TECHNOLOGIES
- Thermal
- Chemical
- Irradiation
- Biological
22MEDICAL WASTE TREATMENT DISPOSAL ALTERNATIVES
- OFF-SITE DISPOSAL VS. ON-SITE TREATMENT
- OFF-SITE CONTRACT DISPOSAL
- Medical waste picked up treated/disposed
off-site via vendor - Facilities responsible for packaging
manifesting - Costs vary widely Locations facility sizes
are main factors - Liabilities risk remain with facilities
- ON-SITE TREATMENT
- Medical waste converted to general waste
- Much lower costs Typically 0.10 to 0.20/lb vs.
0.25 to 2.00/lb - Costs are controlled well know vendor
independence - Risk liability reductions short long-term
23ON-SITE MEDICAL WASTE TREATMENT TECHNOLOGIES
- THERMAL TECHNOLOGIES
- TEMPERATURES 205?F TO 20,000?F
- Low-Heat Processes
- Hot Air Oil
- Infrared Radiation
- Microwaves Macrowaves
- Hot Water
- Steam Direct Indirect Low High
Temperature Chemical - High-Heat Processes
- Incineration
- Pyrolysis
- Plasma Plasma Pyrolysis
24ON-SITE MEDICAL WASTE TREATMENT TECHNOLOGIES
- OTHER TECHNOLOGIES
- Chemical (Disinfection) Technologies
- Shredding Required
- Must Use Chlorine Compounds
- Once-Through Recirculation Systems
- Irradiation Technologies
- Electron Beam Radiation
- Cobalt 60
- Biological Process
- Shredding With Enzymes
- Single Demonstration Process
25EVALUATING ALTERNATE TREATMENT TECHNOLOGIES
- EVALUATION/SELECTION DIFFICULTIES
- Many technologies are new under development
- Most vendors have no full-scale operational
systems - DATA COLLECTION DIFFICULTIES
- Potentially misleading limited data
- Few facilities with limited experience
- UNSTABLE DECLINING INDUSTRY
-
26EVALUATING ALTERNATE TREATMENT TECHNOLOGIES
- KEY EVALUATION CRITERIA
- 1. Demonstrated Performance
- 2. Technical Performance Criteria
- 3. Vendor Qualifications
- 4. Environmental Permitting Issues
- 5. Occupational Health Safety Issues
- 6. Facility Infrastructure Requirements
- 7. Economics
27EVALUATING ALTERNATE TREATMENT TECHNOLOGIES
- WHAT SEEMS TO BE THE BEST ALTERNATIVE?
- CONVENTIONAL STEAM AUTOCLAVE SYSTEM
- Autoclave Processing Unit
- Autoclave Bins
- Bin Dumper
- Optional Automation System
- Optional Integrated Shredder
- -- Treated Waste and/or Confidential Documents
- ADVANTAGES
- Long-proven widely recognized accepted in by
most state agencies - Easy to permit negligible public opposition
- Easy to operate maintain high degree of
reliability - Small space requirements
- Lowest capital operating costs
- -- Financing options available (ECOS) No
capital needed -
-
28CONVENTIONAL STEAM AUTOCLAVE
29AUTOCLAVE WITH BINS IN FRONT OF LOADING DOOR
30LOADING OF BINS INTO AUTOCLAVE TREATMENT CHAMBER
31MOVING BIN TO COMPACTOR DUMPER
32SHARED-SERVICE, CENTRALIZED REGIONAL TREATMENT
FACILITIES
- COMBINED WASTE STREAMS SHARED OPERATIONS
- SIGNIFICANT ADVANTAGES
- Highly favorable economics
- Minimum capital OM costs
- "Automatic" off-site cost reductions
- Enhanced off-site contractor negotiations
- Divorces waste treatment from hospital operations
- Accommodates affiliated small-quantity generators
- VARYING DEVELOPMENT/IMPLEMENTATION OPTIONS
- Participating hospitals only
- Independent developer/investor only
- Combination (depending on risks, control,
profits) - Split/program components transport treatment
33WASTE MANAGEMENT AS PART OF A COMPREHENSIVE
ENVIRONMENTAL COMPLIANCE PROGRAM
- SHOULD HEALTHCARE
- EXECUTIVES WORRY ABOUT ENVIRONMENTAL COMPLIANCE?
34THE RISKS OF POOR ENVIRONMENTAL COMPLIANCE
- VERY SIGNIFICANT FINES
- BAD PUBLICITY LEADING TO -
- -- Poor affect on hospitals reputation for
quality care - -- Loss of patients financial revenues
- -- Poor image projections on staff, patients
general public - -- Increased community opposition to expansion
- new projects
-
35MAJOR ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATIONS AFFECTING
HOSPITALS
- Clean Air Act (CAA)
- Clean Water Act (CWA)
- Comprehensive Environmental Response,
Compensation - Liability Act (CERCLA)
- Emergency planning Community Right-to-Know
(EPCRA) - Federal Insecticide, Fungicide Rodenticide Act
(FIFRA) - Resource Conservation Recovery Act (RCRA)
- Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA)
- Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA)
- MORE THAN 40 PARTS WITH OVER 4,600 SECTIONS IN
THE CFR
36HOSPITAL ENVIRONMENTAL COMPLIANCE CHALLENGES
- Environmental activities rarely controlled by one
department - Lack awareness of spectrum of applicable
environmental requirements - Recordkeeping documentation scattered not
easily retrievable - JCAHO Standards only address limited
environmental issues
37EPAS AUDIT POLICY
- Incentives for Self-Policing Discovery,
Disclosure, Correction Prevention Of
Violations - Effective May 2000
38EPAS INITIATIVES ACTIONS
- REGIONS 1 2 (New England States, NY, NJ, CT
PR) - LAUNCHED COMPLIANCE INITIATIVES TARGETING
HOSPITALS, HEALTHCARE FACILITIES, - COLLEGES UNIVERSITIES
- Alerts
- Self-Audit pacts
- Random, unannounced inspections
- Region 2- 44 facilities inspected
- 22 enforcement actions 911,000 penalties
39EPA REGION 1 INITIATIVE STATUS AS OF JULY 2005
- Total of 480 Facilities
- 44 Inspected 24 Enforcement Actions
- 10 Formal Enforcement Actions Totaling 1.3 Mil
- 8 Settlements Totaling 560 Thousand
- 37 Audit Agreements
- 128 Voluntary Disclosures Totaling 1.1 Mil
- 1,000 Violations Corrected
40SUMMARY OF EPA REGION 1 VIOLATIONS
- IN JULY 2005
- 697 VIOLATIONS FROM 128 FACILITIES
- RCRA Violations 60
- CWA Violations 17
- EPCRA Violations 12
- CAA Violations 7
- TSCA Violations 4
- SDWA Violations 1
41SUMMARY OF EPA REGION 1 VIOLATIONS
- TOP 9 VIOLATIONS FROM 59 RESOLVED VOLUNTARY
DISCLOSURES - VIOLATIONS ACTS FREQUENCY
- ID of HW RCRA 92
- Universal Waste RCRA 66
- Chemical Inventory EPCRA 48
- SIP Requirements CAA 48
- SPCC CWA 44
- Labeling RCRA 35
- CFC Leak Detection CAA 32
- MSDA Records EPCRA 30
- Manifests RCRA 30
42SUMMARY OF EPA REGION 1 HEALTHCARE RCRA
VIOLATIONS
- 409 REPORTED RCRA VIOLATIONS
- ID of HW 23
- Generator Requirements 18
- Container Management 16
- Universal Waste 16
- General Facility Standards 16
- Manifests 7
- Accumulation Time 2
- UST 1
43TYPICAL RCRA VIOLATIONS IN THE HEALTHCARE
INDUSTRY
- Improper labeling of HW containers
- Inadequate, incomplete, or no HW manifests
- Improper management of mercury wastes
- -- Fluorescent lamps
- -- Thermometers
- Improper management of expired/discarded
chemicals - Lack of or inadequate employee training on HW
- No weekly inspections in HW accumulation areas
44SUMMARY,QUESTION DISCUSSIONS