Title: ECOCARE CONFERENCE ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATIONS AFFECTING HEALTHCARE FACILITIES
1ECOCARE CONFERENCE ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATIONS
AFFECTING HEALTHCARE FACILITIES
2WHO IS EAG?
- The Environmental Advisory Group (EAG) is a
multidisciplinary environmental consulting firm
with specific expertise in the healthcare field.
EAG has assisted organizations since 1990 in
planning and executing strategies to meet
environmental requirements.
3Questions For You?
- Your name?
- Position?
- City / Town You Live In?
- Favourite vacation destination?
- One unfulfilled desire
4Drivers of Change
- It is incompatible with the mission of
institutions devoted to healing to be significant
consumers of resources and sources of
environmental harm through air and wastewater
emissions, hazardous and solid waste generation,
greenhouse gas emissions and toxic chemical
usage. Thus, being green has a symbolic and
practical significance for any health care
institution. - The Canadian Coalition for Green
Healthcare (www.greenhealthcare.ca)
5Drivers of Change
- Market Size Growing Healthy!
- Trends re aging population
- Costs are skyrocketing and budgets are tight
- Waste in the system will not be tolerated
- P2 resources are limited Time is scarce
-
6Industry Standards for Environmental Issues
-
- Increasingly stringent
- More accountability to stakeholders
- Encompasses all areas of the corporation
- Social conscience issues on the rise
7 More Industry Standards
- EMS becoming the norm
- ISO 14000 is the gold standard
- Corporate Reporting and accountability is
constantly increasing - Industry being forced to pay
- Social conscience not an option
8CANADIAN HEALTHCARE FACILITIES
- 3000 Hospitals, Medical Facilities, and Surgery
Centres that Require Medical Waste Treatment
Disposal - You Are Consumers
- You Are Waste Generators
- Your ecological footprint is enormous
9Pharmacy
Administrative Supplies
Food Services
Med-Surge Supplies
Hospitals Retirement Assisted Living
Facilities
Gift Shops On-Site Vendors
Grounds Maintenance
Laboratories
Imaging
Capital Equipment
10WASTE VOLUMES
- MEDICAL WASTE 500 MT PER DAY IN CANADA, 6600 MT
PER DAY IN THE U.S. - 1 MT IS ROUGHLY THE SIZE OF A SMALL VOLKSWAGON
- 1 LARGE INSTITUTION (1500) CAN GENERATE 700 MT /
YEAR OF WASTE
11 Is it Complex? You Bet!
12WASTE STREAM TYPESSurprise there are really
only 2!
- Most wastes generated by hospitals and medical
clinics are NON-HAZARDOUS (80 - 90) (kitchen
wastes, office materials, all types of packaging,
workshop residuals, non-infectious patient waste
- disposable masks, gowns -, pop cans,
newspapers, plastic water bottles, etc.) - Potentially hazardous wastes from hospitals and
clinics which have a pathogenic, chemical,
explosive, or radioactive nature are called
medical wastes. Medical wastes include the
following -
- pathological wastes (i.e., body parts, aborted
fetus, tissue and body fluids from surgery and
dead infected laboratory animals) - infectious waste (i.e., surgical dressings and
bandages, infected laboratory beddings,
infectious cultures and stocks from laboratories,
and all waste from patients in isolation wards
handling infectious diseases) - sharps (i.e., needles, syringes, used
instruments, broken glass) - pharmaceutical wastes (i.e., soiled or
out-of-date pharmaceutical products) - chemical wastes (i.e., spent solvents,
disinfectants, pesticides and diagnostic
chemicals) - aerosols (i.e., aerosol containers or gas
canisters which may explode if incinerated or
punctured) - radioactive wastes (i.e., sealed sources in
instruments, and open sources used in vitro
diagnosis or nuclear medical therapy) and - sludges from any on-site wastewater treatment
facilities may be potentially hazardous.
13The Other One (10 20 but )
- Potentially HAZARDOUS WASTES from hospitals and
clinics which have a pathogenic, chemical,
explosive, or radioactive nature aka medical
wastes. May include - pathological wastes (i.e., body parts, aborted
fetus, tissue and body fluids from surgery and
dead infected laboratory animals) - infectious waste (i.e., surgical dressings and
bandages, infected laboratory beddings,
infectious cultures and stocks from laboratories,
and all waste from patients in isolation wards
handling infectious diseases) - sharps (i.e., needles, syringes, used
instruments, broken glass) - pharmaceutical wastes (i.e., soiled or
out-of-date pharmaceutical products) - chemical wastes (i.e., spent solvents,
disinfectants, pesticides and diagnostic
chemicals) - aerosols (i.e., aerosol containers or gas
canisters which may explode if incinerated or
punctured) - radioactive wastes (i.e., sealed sources in
instruments, and open sources used in vitro
diagnosis or nuclear medical therapy) and - sludges from any on-site wastewater treatment
facilities may be potentially hazardous.
14CONSIDERING REGULATIONS
- Federal, Provincial, Municipal
- Emissions (Air, Water, Soil)
- Hazardous or Non-hazardous
- Hazardous specific types based on
Characteristics - Corrosive
- Reactive
- Ignitable
- Toxic
15CCME 1992 Canadian Council of Ministers of the
Environment
- Guidelines for the Management of Biomedical Waste
in Canada - Definitions
- Treatment Options
- Disposal Options
16CEPA Health Canada Chemical Management
Plan(1999)
- Evaluate assess chemicals used in Canada in
medical products including human veterinary
drugs, natural health products, cosmetics, food
additives and medical devices
17CEPA - NPRI National Pollutant Release
Inventory
- Established under CEPA, after Bhopal
- First report released in 1995 based on 1993
data - Chemicals released, disposed of and
recycled by the ICI sector - 10 employees, 268 listed substances, 10 mt
18TDG Federal
- Transportation of Dangerous Goods Regulations
- Safety standards and regulations overseen by
Transport Canada - Develops, provides oversight and gives expert
advice on dangerous goods accidents to promote
public safety in the transportation of dangerous
goods by all modes of transport in Canada.
19Biomedical Waste Ontario C-4
- Regulation 347 governs handling, transport and
disposal of subject waste, which includes all
hazardous wastes including pathological waste - MOE Guideline C-4, published in 1994, deals with
The Management of Biomedical Waste in Ontario - Proposed Revisions posted October 23, 2008
- (EBR010-3864)
20Environmental Protection Act (EPA) Ontario
- Regulates the emissions of toxic substances into
air, soil and groundwater - A contaminant is defined as a solid, gas, liquid,
odour, heat, sound, vibration, radiation, or
comboresulting from human activities which may
cause injury to humans, flora or fauna.
21TOXICS REDUCTION ACT (Bill 167)
- Royal Assent June 3, 2009
- Key element in Ontarios toxic chemicals
reduction strategy - Part of overall initiative to promote a green
- economy
- Applies to the owner and the operator of a
- facility (not as yet a defined term)
- Future regulations will implement, to require
- tracking and reduction plans for targeted
- chemicals at prescribed facilities
22Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) Across
Canada
23EPR Legislation Across Canada
full-colour symbols mean in-place or pending
legislation
white-washed symbols mean proposed legislation
see inset
243RS REGULATIONS
- Introduced In 1994 O. Reg. 102/94 103/94 to be
Conducted Annually - ICI Waste Audits Reduction Workplans
- Regular (Non-Hazardous) Waste only
- Most Hospitals NOT in compliance MOE is busy
conducting Inspections - OHA Green Initiative
25WARNING!!!
- If you look at these forms too long
- YOU WILL GO BLIND
26BRITISH COLUMBIA
- Hazardous Waste Regulations Under Review
- Some Hazardous HHW covered under current
regulations, not sharps - Will become much more stringent
27OTHER PROVINCES
- NOVA SCOTIA
- QUEBEC
- SASKATCHEWAN
28PRACTICE GREENHEALTH H2ERegulated Medical
Waste Resource LocatorSelect a state by clicking
on the map
29WHERE TO FROM HERE?
- Each province is different
- Clear shift in responsibility from government to
industry - Programs growing in scope complexity
- Organizations / resources are scarce. Find them,
use them!
30WHAT TO DO?
- Figure Out Where You Are
- Figure Out What Your Role Is
- Audit if Applicable
- Get Expert Advice
- Pay if you Must
- Forge Ahead Like the Rest of Us! ?
31Thank You!
- Lisa J. James
- President CEO
- The Environmental Advisory Group
- 43-2205 South Millway,
- Mississauga, Ontario L5L 3T2
- lisa.james_at_enviroadvisory.com
- www.enviroadvisory.com
- T 905-569-0620
- C 416-566-8813