Formal waste management services are not accessible for the majority of primary healthcare clinics on the African continent, and affordable and practicable technology solutions are required in the developing country context. In response, a protocol was established for the first quantitative and qualitative evaluation of relatively low cost small-scale incinerators for use at rural primary healthcare clinics. The protocol comprised the first phase of four, which defined the comprehensive trials of three incineration units. The trials showed that all of the units could be used to render medical waste non-infectious, and to destroy syringes or render needles unsuitable for reuse. Emission loads from the incinerators are higher than large-scale commercial incinerators, but a panel of experts considered the incinerators to be more acceptable compared to the other waste treatment and disposal options available in under-serviced rural areas. However, the incinerators must be used within a safe waste management programme that provides the necessary resources in the form of collection containers, maintenance support, acceptable energy sources, and understandable operational instructions for the incinerators, whilst minimising the exposure risks to emissions through the correct placement of the units in relation to the clinic and the surrounding communities. On-going training and awareness building are essential in order to ensure that the incinerators are correctly used as a sustainable waste treatment option.
Reference:
Rogers, DEC and Brent, AC. 2006. Small-scale medical waste incinerators: experiences and trials in South Africa. Waste Management, vol. 26(11), pp 1229-1236
Rogers, D., & Brent, A. (2006). Small-scale medical waste incinerators: experiences and trials in South Africa. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/2104
Rogers, DEC, and AC Brent "Small-scale medical waste incinerators: experiences and trials in South Africa." (2006) http://hdl.handle.net/10204/2104
Rogers D, Brent A. Small-scale medical waste incinerators: experiences and trials in South Africa. 2006; http://hdl.handle.net/10204/2104.