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GREEN DENTISTRY EVOLVES

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Title: GREEN DENTISTRY EVOLVES


1
GREEN DENTISTRY EVOLVES
  • Conference
  • UK delegation presentation

2
Contents
  • Current curriculum in dental undergraduate
    teaching
  • Green ethics in the UK
  • Relevant regulations and legislations in the UK
  • Waste management in UK faculties and our
    university

3
In dental teaching hospitals the arrangement
for infection control, control of substances
hazardous to health and safety of equipment,
including that involving ionising radiation, must
be exemplary.
  • Quoting the GDC website The First Five Years a
    framework for undergraduate dental education
  • Lectures in first and second year on Infection
    Control
  • Safe Disposal of Clinical Waste
  • Management of Needle Sticks and Sharps Injuries
  • Clinical Handbook on Infection Control and Body
    Fluid Exposures
  • OSCE in first and second year on cross-infection
    control and safe waste handling

4
Ethical and legal requirements of waste management
  • All healthcare organisations have a legal
    responsibility to dispose of waste safely
    ensuring no harm is caused either to staff,
    members of the public or the environment. This
    responsibility begins when waste is generated and
    ends with its final disposal, even where properly
    authorised agents are used.
  • It is essential that persons handling waste
    exercise care to prevent injury or transmission
    of infection to themselves or others. This is to
    fulfil their responsibilities under the current
    legislation.
  • The safe disposal of waste is the responsibility
    of the independent self-employed practitioner
    local authority special collection or authorised
    independent contractor. Certified waste disposal
    companies will provide a consignment note on
    collection of waste.
  • (Essex Health Protection Unit-Dental Infection
    Control Guidelines, January 05)

5
Segregation of Dental Waste
  • Domestic or Ordinary waste packaging
    cardboard/paper, office paper, glass bottles,
    plastic
  • Hazardous waste sharps and clinical waste (items
    contaminated with the patients blood or saliva)
  • Special waste radiographic developer and fixer,
    prescription only medication, partially used
    anaesthetic cartridges
  • Controlled waste lead foil from x-ray film,
    waste amalgam and used amalgam capsules

6
Recommended waste management options
  • Domestic waste usually disposed in landfill by
    Local Council. Recommended management option is
    recycling.
  • Clinical waste is all incinerated via specialised
    waste management companies. (licences and
    destinations). Approved puncture-proof containers
    should be used for sharps.
  • Hazardous waste is recommended to be managed via
    incineration or recovery through waste management
    companies. NB fully discharged cartridges are
    treated as hazardous waste and is disposed of via
    the sharps container as clinical waste.
  • Controlled waste should be stored separately in
    special containers.

7
Current Regulations
  • Hazardous waste is subject to the requirements
    of the Hazardous Waste Directive (91/689/EEC).
    This is transposed in England by the Hazardous
    Waste (England and Wales) Regulations (SI
    2005/894). Waste amalgam form dental care,
    collected by a separator or disposed of from
    premises other than through the separator is
    subject to the requirements of these Regulations.
  • The Environment Agency is responsible for
    enforcing the Regulations.

8
Water Regulations
  • A new legislation coming into effect in July 2007
    enforcing the separation of amalgam for waste
    water, following guidance from the Department of
    Environment, Food and Rural Affairs 2005
  • Envirodent supply the the Rasch 890 Amalgam
    Separator which has been supplied to some NH
    practices through their local Primary Care Trusts

9
Meeting the requirements of these Regulations
  • Dentists need to
  • Consider whether they need to notify their
    premises to the Environment Agency (if
    producinggt200kg of hazardous waste)
  • Ensure that all consignment notes detailing the
    waste, its hazardous properties and method of
    disposal are correctly written and kept by the
    practice for at least 3ys
  • Ensure that hazardous waste is not mixed with
    other non-hazardous waste or any other substances
    or materials unless authorised by a permit
  • Keep records of amalgam waste produced and sent
    for disposal or recovery

10
Duty of Care
  • Section 34 of the Environmental Protection Act
    1990 places a duty on anyone importing,
    producing, carrying, keeping, treating or
    disposing of a controlled waste to take measures
    to ensure that the waste is handled and disposed
    of safely. You must prevent the waste causing
    pollution or harming anybody. You must store
    waste safely and ensure it cannot escape from
    your control. If you give waste to someone else,
    you must be sure they are authorised to take it
    and can transport, recycle of dispose of it
    safely. If you break the law, you can be fined an
    unlimited amount.!

11
Waste disposal in our university
  • Black polythene bags for domestic waste
  • Yellow polythene bags for clinical waste
  • Yellow sharps bin for disposal of sharps
  • Amalgam waste is stored in a sealed container
    under solution which supresses mercury vapour and
    empty capsules are stored in a special container
  • Lead foil from radiographic film packets stored
    separately from rest of packet in a plastic
    container.
  • Latex free gloves available in each dental bay as
    well as latex free rubber dam
  • Radiographic solutions? Paper recycling?

12
References
  • Infection Control for Dentistry, Advice sheet
    A12, British Dental Association (supported by the
    Department of Health)
  • Guidance for Dentists on Waste Dental Amalgam,
    Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
    2005
  • Environmental Protection Act 1990
  • Environmental Protection (Duty of Care)
    Regulations 1991
  • Special Waste Regulations 1996, 1997 waste
    disposal
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