Current through Register Vol. 41, No. 3, September 23, 2024
B. A solid waste is a regulated medical waste
if it meets either of the two criteria of this subsection:
1. The solid waste is suspected by the health
care professional in charge of being capable of producing an infectious disease
in humans. A solid waste shall be considered to be capable of producing an
infectious disease if it has been or is likely to have been contaminated by an
organism likely to be pathogenic to healthy humans, such organism is not
routinely and freely available in the community, and if such organism has a
significant probability of being present in sufficient quantities and with
sufficient virulence to transmit disease. If the exact cause of a patient's
illness is unknown, but the health care professional in charge suspects a
contagious disease is the cause, the likelihood of pathogen transmission shall
be assessed based on the pathogen suspected of being the cause of the
illness.
2. The solid waste or
solid waste stream is identified in the following list:
a. Discarded cultures, stocks, specimens,
vaccines, and associated items likely to have been contaminated by them are
regulated medical wastes if they are likely to contain organisms likely to be
pathogenic to healthy humans. Wastes from the production of biologicals and
antibiotics likely to have been contaminated by organisms likely to be
pathogenic to healthy humans are regulated medical wastes;
b. Wastes consisting of human blood or body
fluids, containers of human blood or body fluids, and items contaminated with
human blood or body fluids are regulated medical waste. Human blood and body
fluids solidified by absorbent gel, powder, or similar means are also regulated
medical waste.
c. Human
pathological and anatomical waste, including tissues, organs, body parts, and
other pathological or anatomical wastes;
d. Sharps likely to be contaminated with a
pathogen or that may become contaminated with a pathogen through handling or
during transportation and also capable of cutting or penetrating skin or a
packaging material. This also includes sharps generated through veterinary
practice, acupuncture needles, and household sharps collected in a sharps drop
box;
e. When animals are
intentionally infected with organisms likely to be pathogenic to healthy humans
for the purposes of research, in vivo testing, production of biological
materials, or any other reason, the animal carcasses, body parts, bedding
material, and all other wastes likely to have been contaminated are regulated
medical wastes when discarded, disposed of, or placed in storage;
f. Wastes that are contaminated with a
Category A infectious substance are regulated medical waste that shall be
managed in accordance with
9VAC20-121-160;
g. Any residue or contaminated soil, water,
or other debris resulting from the cleanup of a spill of any regulated medical
waste; and
h. Any solid waste
contaminated by or mixed with regulated medical waste, including solid wastes
that are packaged as regulated medical wastes.
C. The following materials are not solid
wastes or regulated medical wastes:
1.
Domestic sewage, including wastes that are not stored and are disposed of in a
sanitary sewer system (with or without grinding).
2. Any mixture of domestic sewage and other
wastes that pass through a sewer system to a wastewater treatment works
permitted by the State Water Control Board or the Virginia Department of
Health.
3. Sanitary waste from
septic tanks (septage) and sewage holding tanks that is regulated by other
state agencies.
4. Human remains
when:
a. Under the control of a licensed
physician or dentist, when the remains are being used or examined for medical
purposes and are not solid wastes;
b. Provided to qualified educational programs
as anatomical gifts;
c. Removed
during a medical procedure and retained by the patient for religious or other
purposes provided that the remains are not a source of disease transmission, as
determined by a health care professional; or
d. Properly interred in a cemetery or in
preparation by a licensed funeral director or embalmer for such interment or
cremation.
5. Individual
human and animal cremains.
6. Dead
or diseased animals subject to regulation by the Virginia Department of
Agriculture and Consumer Services.
7. Bed linen, instruments, medical care
equipment, and other materials that are routinely cleaned and reused for their
original purpose are not subject to this chapter until they are discarded and
are a solid waste unless a health care professional has determined these items
to be to be capable of producing an infectious disease in humans in accordance
with subdivision B 1 of this section. These items do not include reusable carts
or containers used in the management of regulated medical waste, which shall be
managed in accordance with
9VAC20-121-130.
8. Used health care products and reusable
medical devices, being returned to a manufacturer or third party for
reprocessing (cleaning and disinfecting or sterilizing) and reuse if packaged
and labeled in accordance with
49 CFR
173.134(b)(12)(ii)(A) through
(D) and reprocessed in accordance with
applicable U.S. Food and Drug Administration requirements. Used health care
products and contaminated medical devices or equipment that meet either of the
two criteria in subsection B of this section being sent offsite for recycling
or disposal are regulated medical waste and shall be managed in accordance with
this chapter. These items do not include reusable carts or containers used in
the management of regulated medical waste, which shall be managed in accordance
with 9VAC20-121-130.
9. The following items while in use: samples
for laboratory tests, patient specimens, and criminal evidence items taken
during enforcement procedures that meet the definition of regulated medical
waste. Once these items are no longer needed for their intended purpose, they
shall be managed as regulated medical waste unless exempt under subsection D of
this section.
10. Tissue blocks of
organs or tissues (except those associated with prions) that have been fixed in
paraffin or similar embedding materials for cytological or histological
examinations. Once these items are no longer needed for their intended purpose,
they may be managed as solid waste.
D. The following solid wastes are not
regulated medical wastes for purpose of this chapter:
1. Wastes that have been treated in
accordance with this chapter are no longer regulated medical waste and may be
used, reused, or reclaimed in accordance with the provisions of the Virginia
Solid Waste Management Regulations (9VAC20-81), provided the following
requirements are met:
a. Treated waste that
was once regulated but is no longer regulated medical waste shall not be
repackaged as regulated medical waste. Solid waste repackaged as regulated
medical waste is regulated medical waste.
b. If the solid waste is no longer regulated
medical waste because of treatment, the generator and the permitted treatment
facility shall maintain a record of the treatment for three years after
treatment. Generators treating regulated medical waste onsite shall maintain
records in accordance with applicable provisions of Part V (9VAC20-121-300 et seq.) of this
chapter. Generators shipping regulated medical waste offsite for treatment
shall maintain records in accordance with
9VAC20-121-100 I.
c. The generator or proposed user of treated
regulated medical waste may request that the department make a case-specific
determination that the solid waste may be beneficially used in a manufacturing
process to make a product or as an effective substitute for a commercial
product. The requestor shall submit a beneficial use demonstration in
accordance with the requirements of
9VAC20-81-97.
2. Household waste, including household
sharps. Household sharps shall be placed in an opaque, leak proof, puncture
resistant container that is closed, tightly sealed, and labeled for home use
before being mixed with other solid wastes or disposed. Household sharps may be
placed in U.S. Food and Drug Administration-cleared sharps containers if
specifically designed and labeled for home use. Household sharps containers
shall be labeled "HOUSEHOLD SHARPS - DO NOT RECYCLE" or "HOME GENERATED SHARPS
- DO NOT RECYCLE" printed in large legible text and permanent ink. Household
sharps centrally collected in a sharps drop box shall be managed as regulated
medical waste in accordance with
9VAC20-121-300 E 1. Medical waste
generated by a health care professional administering care in a household is
regulated medical waste and must be managed in accordance with this
chapter.
3. Nail and skin
clippings, breast milk, sputum, semen, teeth, sweat, tears, urine, vomitus, or
saliva, unless contaminated with visible blood or a health care professional
has determined these items to be capable of producing an infectious disease in
humans in accordance with subdivision B 1 of this section.
4. Dental amalgam managed in accordance with
the Dental Rule ( 40 CFR Part 441).
5. Meat or other food items being discarded
because of spoilage, contamination, or recall.
6. The following discarded items, when they
are unused or expired: health care products, medical equipment, medical
devices, unused sharps in the original packaging, or other materials, unless a
health care professional has determined these items to be capable of producing
an infectious disease in humans in accordance with subdivision B 1 of this
section.
7. Used products for
personal hygiene, such as diapers, facial tissues, underpads, adult
incontinence products, sanitary napkins, and feminine hygiene items, unless a
health care professional has determined these items to be capable of producing
an infectious disease in humans in accordance with subdivision B 1 of this
section.
8. The following discarded
items when they are empty: urine collection bags and tubing, suction canisters
and tubing, IV solution bags and tubing, colostomy bags, ileostomy bags,
urostomy bags, plastic fluid containers, enteral feeding containers and tubing,
hemovacs, urine bottles, and urine specimen cups, unless the items are subject
to regulation under
16VAC25-90-1910.1030
(29 CFR
1910.1030) or a comparable state or federal
standard.
9. The following
discarded items: urinary catheters, suction catheters, plastic cannula, IV
spikes, nasogastic tubes, oxygen tubing and cannula, ventilator tubing, enema
bags and tubing, enema bottles, thermometer probe covers, irrigating feeding
syringes, and bedpans or urinals, unless the items are subject to
16VAC25-90-1910.1030
(29 CFR
1910.1030) or a comparable state or federal
standard.
10. Items such as
bandages, gauze, or cotton swabs or other similar absorbent materials, unless
at any time following use the items are saturated or would release human blood
or human body fluids in a liquid or semiliquid state if compressed. Items that
contain or that are caked with dried human blood or human body fluids and are
capable of releasing these materials during handling are regulated medical
waste. An item would be considered caked if it could release flakes or
particles when handled.
11. Human
blood and body fluids when solidified by absorbent gel, powder, or similar
means as part of a spill cleanup at establishments engaged in operations other
than health care or management of regulated medical waste. This category
includes waste generated by stores, markets, office buildings, restaurants,
businesses, schools, manufacturers, and commercial or industrial
operations.
12. Waste generated
from the care of an animal when care is provided by the owner of the animal,
such as at a household or farm. Waste generated through veterinary practice
that meets either of the two criteria of subsection B of this section, such as
sharps, must be managed as regulated medical waste.
13. Waste from cosmetology, ear and body
piercing, nail salons, and tattoo establishments, except for sharps and
unabsorbed human blood or body fluids.
14. Plant or animal wastes, such as bat
guano, removed from construction or demolition projects when actions are taken
to avoid worker exposure, including use of appropriate personal protective
equipment, and the waste is managed in accordance with any applicable best
management practice, special handling, and other precautions for processing or
disposal.
15. Waste from food,
drug, and cosmetics testing laboratories (except research laboratories) using
microbiological methods for the detection of human infectious agents, microbial
toxins, or chemical residuals as part of routine quality assurance testing of
food, drugs, or cosmetic products.
16. Wastes regulated by the Virginia
Department of Health, the State Water Control Board, the Air Pollution Control
Board, Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, Federal Drug
Administration, U.S. Department of Agriculture, or any other state or federal
agency with such authority.
Statutory Authority: § 10.1-1402 of the Code of
Virginia; 42 USC §
6941 et seq.; 40 CFR Part
257.