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any further evaluation or treatment that is these materials during handling; <br /> required. contaminated sharps; and pathological and <br /> microbiological wastes containing blood or <br /> OSHA— Occupational Safety and Health blood components. <br /> Administration of the U.S. Department of <br /> Labor; the Federal agency with safety and Source Individual—Any individual, living <br /> health regulatory and enforcement or dead, whose blood or other potentially <br /> authorities for most U.S. industry and infectious materials maybe a source of <br /> business. occupational exposure to the employee. <br /> Examples include, but are not limited to, <br /> OPIM- Other Potentially Infectious hospital and clinic patients; clients in <br /> Materials— (1)The following human body institutions for the developmentally <br /> fluids: semen, vaginal secretions, disabled; trauma victims; clients of drug <br /> cerebrospinal fluid, synovial fluid, pleural and alcohol treatment facilities; residents of <br /> fluid, pericardial fluid, peritoneal fluid, hospices and nursing homes; human <br /> amniotic fluid, saliva in dental procedures, remains; and individuals who donate or sell <br /> any body fluid that is visibly contaminated blood or blood components. <br /> with blood, and all body fluids in situations <br /> Where it is difficult or impossible to Sterilize—The use of a physical or <br /> differentiate between body fluids; (2)Any chemical procedure to destroy all microbial <br /> unfixed tissue or organ (other than intact life including highly resistant bacterial <br /> skin)from a human (living or dead); (3) endospores. <br /> HIV-containing cell or tissue organs, or <br /> other tissues from experimental animals Universal Precautions—An approach to <br /> infected with HIV or HBV. infection control. According to the concept <br /> of Universal Precautions, all human blood <br /> Parenteral— Piercing mucous membranes and certain human body fluids are treated <br /> or the skin barrier through such events as as if known to be infectious for HIV, HBV, <br /> needlesticks, human bites, cuts, and and other bloodborne pathogens. <br /> abrasions. <br /> Work Practice Controls— Controls that <br /> Personal Protective Equipment— reduce the likelihood of exposure by <br /> Specialized clothing or equipment worn by altering the manner in which a task is <br /> an employee for protection against a performed (e.g., prohibiting recapping of <br /> hazard. General work clothes (e.g., needles by a two-handed technique.) <br /> uniforms, pants, shirts or blouses) not <br /> intended to function as protection against a <br /> hazard are not considered to be personal <br /> protective equipment. <br /> Regulated Waste— Liquid or semi-liquid <br /> blood or other potentially infectious <br /> materials; contaminated items that would <br /> release blood or other potentially infectious <br /> materials in a liquid or semi-liquid state if <br /> compressed; items that are caked with <br /> dried blood or other potentially infectious <br /> materials and are capable of releasing <br /> Page 9 of 16 <br />