| |
Ethylene oxide |
|
 |
A management plan
describes actions in the event of an accidental release of
ethylene oxide. |
|
 |
Ethylene oxide
sterilizer has valid operating permit if
required. |
|
 |
Emission controls
for ethylene oxide sterilizers are in place and well
maintained. |
|
 |
Wherever employee
exposure to ethylene oxide may exceed 1 ppm (8 hour time
weighted average) or 5 ppm (15 minute average), exposure
levels must be monitored periodically, or testing must
indicate exposure is consistently below those levels.
|
 |
Ethylene oxide is replaced with safer alternative
sterile processing technology such as hydrogen peroxide plasma
or ozone. |
| |
Formaldehyde,
glutaraldehyde |
|
 |
Employee exposure
to formaldehyde is monitored in all appropriate areas, or
statistically representative tests establish that employee
exposure is consistently below 0.5 ppm, time weighted average.
|
 |
Formalin use is
minimized to the extent
possible. |
|
 |
Formalin is
recycled. |
|
|
|
 |
Glutaraldehyde is
replaced with a less hazardous high-level disinfectant such
as ortho-pthalaldehyde (e.g. Cidex
OPA) |
| |
Xylene and other solvents |
 |
Xylene use is
limited to the extent possible and/or terpene-based clearing
agents are used. |
 |
Solvents are
recycled. |
| |
Other air contaminants |
 |
Use of aerosols,
e.g. room deodorizers, cleaners, hand sanitizers is reduced or
eliminated. (Rationale: aerosols add hazardous
chemicals to breathing zone potentially diminishing patient
safety. Waste aerosols may be considered hazardous waste
increasing management and disposal costs.) |
|
|
- A list
of exposure limits for a wide range of
toxic and hazardous substances can be found in 29
CFR 1910.1000.
|