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II ' I i <br /> S A NJ O Q Q U I N i Environmental Health Department <br /> COUNTY-- <br /> Medical Waste Definitions — California Health & Safety Code <br /> 117690. <br /> (a) "Medical waste"means any biohazardous, pathology, pharmaceutical, or trace chemotherapy waste not <br /> regulated by the federal Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976(Public Law 94-580), as amended; <br /> sharps and trace chemotherapy wastes generated in a health care setting in the diagnosis,treatment, <br /> immunization, or care of humans or animals;waste generated in autopsy or necropsy;waste generated during <br /> preparation of a body for final disposition such as cremation or interment;waste generated in research pertaining <br /> to the production or testing of microbiologicals;waste generated in research using human or animal pathogens; <br /> sharps and laboratory waste that poses a potential risk of infection to humans generated in the inoculation of <br /> animals In commercial farming operations;waste generated from the consolidation of home-generated sharps;and <br /> waste generated in the cleanup of trauma scenes. Biohazardous, pathology, pharmaceutical, sharps, and trace <br /> chemotherapy wastes that meet the conditions of this section are not subject to any of the hazardous waste <br /> requirements found in Chapter 6.5 (commencing with Section 25100)of Division 20. <br /> (b)For purposes of this part the following definitions apply: <br /> (1) "Biohazardous waste"includes all of the following: <br /> (A)(i) Regulated medical waste, clinical waste,or biomedical waste that is a waste or reusable material <br /> derived from the medical treatment of a human or from an animal that is suspected by the attending <br /> veterinarian of being infected with a pathogen that is also infectious to humans, which includes diagnosis <br /> and immunization; or from biomedical research, which includes the production and testing of biological <br /> products. <br /> (ii)Regulated medical waste or clinical waste or biomedical waste suspected of containing a highly <br /> communicable disease, <br /> (B) Laboratory waste such as human specimen cultures or animal specimen cultures that are infected with <br /> pathogens that are also infectious to humans; cultures and stocks of infectious agents from research; <br /> wastes from the production of bacteria, viruses, spores, discarded live and attenuated vaccines used in <br /> human health care or research, discarded animal vaccines, including Brucellosis and Contagious Ecthyma, <br /> as defined by the department; culture dishes, devices used to transfer, inoculate, and mix cultures;and <br /> wastes identified by Section 173.134 of Title 49 of the Code of Federal Regulations as Category B"once <br /> wasted"for laboratory wastes. <br /> C Waste that at the point of transport from the generator's site or at the point o disposal <br /> ( ) p p g f contains <br /> P <br /> recognizable fluid human blood,fluid human blood products, containers, or equipment containing human <br /> blood that is fluid,or blood from animals suspected by the attending veterinarian of being contaminated with <br /> infectious agents known to be contagious to humans. <br /> (D)Waste containing discarded materials contaminated with excretion,exudate, or secretions from humans <br /> or animals that are required to be Isolated by the infection control staff,the attending physician and surgeon, <br /> the attending veterinarian, or the local health officer,to protect others from highly communicable diseases or <br /> diseases of animals that are communicable to humans. <br /> (2) Pathology waste includes both of the following: <br /> (A) Human body parts, with the exception of teeth, removed at surgery and surgery specimens or tissues <br /> removed at surgery or autopsy that are suspected by the health care professional of being contaminated <br /> with infectious agents known to be contagious to humans or having been fixed in formaldehyde or another <br /> fixative. <br /> (B)Animal parts, tissues,fluids, or carcasses suspected by the attending veterinarian of being contaminated <br /> with infectious agents known to be contagious to humans. <br /> 6of11 <br />