Solid waste management in local hospitals of the north of Valle del Cauca, Colombia

Health-care institutions must offer adequate conditions for both employers and users in order to maintain, improve or recover their health status; inadequate health-care solid waste (h s w) management is an obstacle to achieve this goal. Objective:to estimate the quantity and composition of h s w i...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Patricia Torres L, Carlos A. Madera P, Luis F. Marmolejo R
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Universidad de Antioquia 2010-04-01
Series:Revista Facultad Nacional de Salud Pública
Subjects:
Online Access:http://aprendeenlinea.udea.edu.co/revistas/index.php/fnsp/article/view/2778/4705
Description
Summary:Health-care institutions must offer adequate conditions for both employers and users in order to maintain, improve or recover their health status; inadequate health-care solid waste (h s w) management is an obstacle to achieve this goal. Objective:to estimate the quantity and composition of h s w in ten healthcare public institutions located in ten municipalities in northern Valle del Cauca region (Colombia). Methodology: quantity and composition of h s w was estimated through two 24 hours sampling rounds. Results: the proportion of hazardous healthcare solid waste (h h s w) was usually equal to or higher than 25% and it also surpassed the mean average values reported by organizations like World Health Organization; bio-sanitary waste was the category with major proportion in the h h s w fraction. Discussion: the values obtained in order to determine indicators as kg/bed-day and kg/patient-day were in a lower or equal range of those values reported by different institutional or scientific sources. Considering the health-care services offered in the evaluated institutions, the kg/patient-day indicator is considered more representative than the kg/bed-day.
ISSN:0120-386X