Chemical waste, infectious (biohazard), and pathological (large tissue) waste are the three main forms of waste produced by clinical laboratories. Proper disposal methods and environmentally sound procedures for dealing with laboratory wastes are detailed here. In the healthcare industry, “red bag waste“ refers to biohazardous infectious waste. Blood, laboratory waste, and other body fluids that must adhere to specific regulations can all go into the red bag. Autoclaving (or sterilisation) in a properly equipped facility is the gold standard for treating this kind of trash. Typically, after being collected, this trash is compacted and taken to a designated dump. Oftentimes, the streams of trash produced in laboratories are disregarded. After all, the money for trash removal doesn't come straight out of the lab's coffers, does it? A sophisticated process for disposing of numerous waste streams inside the laboratory setting has replaced what was once a straightforward approach to dis
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