¾ Purchase of needle destroyer if resources permit
¾ Incineration of all infected waste
¾ Deep burial in controlled land fill sites (protected from
¾ Shredding of disposable plasticware waste.
¾ Minor bleed with percutaneous inoculation, open skin
wound, breached skin, exposed mucous membranes.
¾ Employee identification, date, time with place of
¾ Circumstances around accident
¾ Easy access to medical advice with counseling. Consult,
physician for AZT prophylaxis regime if medication
¾ After consent with counseling within 2 weeks, 5 weeks,
¾ For fever, pharyngitis, rash, malaise, lymphadenopathy,
myalgia and arthralgia within 6 months
¾ Do not leave the workplace or walk around the
laboratory while wearing gloves
¾ Wash hands with soap and water immediately after
any contamination and after work is finished. If gloves
are worn, wash your hands with soap and water
after removing the gloves. This is a vital and simple
precaution that is often overlooked
¾ Wear a laboratory gown or uniform when in the
laboratory. Wrap-around gowns are preferable. Remove
this protective clothing before leaving the laboratory
¾ When work with material that is potentially infected
with HIV is in progress, close the laboratory door and
restrict access to the laboratory. The door should have
a sign BIOHAZARD: NO ADMITTANCE
¾ Keep the laboratory clean, neat and free from
extraneous materials and equipment
¾ Disinfect work surfaces when procedures are
completed at the end of each working day. An effective
all-purpose disinfectant is a hypochlorite solution
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