Guest guest Posted February 24, 2010 Report Share Posted February 24, 2010 Love it! Thanks. Pamela From: EOHarm [mailto:EOHarm ] On Behalf Of Sheri Nakken Sent: Tuesday, February 23, 2010 7:10 PM To: Recipient list suppressed: Subject: Disposing of Unused or Expired H1N1 Vaccine in Minnesota injected into you or your child but handled as hazardous waste outside you same with dental amalgam - hazardous when it comes into the office and hazardous when it is taken out of your mouth and leaves the office - but just fine in your mouth - most be saliva is magic http://www.health.state.mn.us/divs/idepc/diseases/flu/hcp/vaccine/sh/vaxdisposal.html better view of chart on the webpage................... Disposing of Unused or Expired H1N1 Vaccine in Minnesota On this page: Hazardous waste Infectious waste Where to Dispose of H1N1 Vaccine, Vials, and Syringes Download PDF version formatted for print: Disposing of Unused or Expired H1N1 Vaccine in Minnesota (PDF: 37KB/1 page) During the 2009-10 flu season, unused or expired H1N1 vaccine products may not be returned to the distributor. Instead, providers are responsible for disposing of them. To dispose of these materials appropriately, you need to know if they are either hazardous waste or infectious waste or both or neither. Those that are neither are considered industrial solid waste (normal trash). Proper disposal of vaccines is everyone’s responsibility to protect our environment. Hazardous waste Unused or expired H1N1 vaccines are considered hazardous if they contain mercury (such as thimerosal) or cresol-based preservatives. These are most commonly found in multi-dose vials and some pre-filled syringes. Any vial that is not empty* and contains vaccine with a mercury or cresol-based preservative must be managed as hazardous waste under Minnesota Hazardous Waste Rules. This includes all multi-dose vials of H1N1 vaccine and the Novartis H1N1 pre-filled syringes that contain a trace of mercury. If you already work with a hazardous waste disposal company, you might want to use them to dispose of unused or expired H1N1 vaccine. However, it is generally cheaper to go through a Very Small Quantity Generators (VSQG) site. See the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency's fact sheet, VSQG Collection Program Requirements for Generators (PDF: 180KB/2 pages) (Attention: Non-MDH link) for more infomation on using VSQGs for disposal of hazardous waste. If you have never generated or shipped hazardous waste before, you will need to complete some paperwork, probably two forms, but the VSQG site or hazardous waste disposal company will help with that. You can assume that preservative-free vaccines (most commonly single-use vials) and single-dose pre-filled syringes (excluding Novartis syringes) are non-hazardous. Infectious waste You can assume that an empty vial that contained H1N1 vaccine is non-infectious. However, that vial is considered infectious waste if combined with a used sharp, such as an injection syringe, broken contaminated glass, or lancet. Where to Dispose of H1N1 Vaccine, Vials, and Syringes H1N1 Waste Items Type of Waste Where to Dispose Empty vials Empty syringes without needles Non-infectious and non-hazardous Normal trash Empty syringes with needles Infectious only (non-hazardous) Sharps container Multi-dose vials containing H1N1 vaccine Pre-filled syringes containing Fluviron vaccine by Novartis Non-infectious and hazardous Hazardous waste container and management. May be disposed of through a VSQG site, usually for a fee. Not all sites accept this waste, so call first. Used syringe with intact needle that still contains vaccine (unlikely to occur unless syringe malfunctions during use) Infectious and hazardous Hazardous waste container that meets sharps-container requirements Management compliant with both hazardous and infectious waste requirements May be disposed of through a hazardous waste disposal company Preservative-free vaccines (most commonly single-use vials and some pre-filled syringes), including LAIV Non-hazardous Normal trash *A vial is considered empty when there is 3% or less of the original vaccine remaining and all vaccine that can be removed by normal means (syringe) has been removed. Single- or multi-dose vials that have been fully administered may still contain extra vaccine. Just because there is not enough vaccine left for a dose does not mean the vial is empty for waste disposal purposes. If there is enough leftover vaccine in a vial that more liquid can be removed with a syringe, it must be managed as hazardous waste. (Minn. R. 7045.0127, subp. 2.) For information on hazardous waste disposal in your area call your county public health office. Sheri Nakken, R.N., MA, Hahnemannian Homeopath Vaccination Information & Choice Network, Washington State, USA Vaccines - http://vaccinationdangers.wordpress.com/ Homeopathy http://homeopathycures.wordpress.com Vaccine Dangers, Childhood Disease Classes & Homeopathy Online/email courses - next classes start February 24 & 25 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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