| Q. |
How do we go about getting our lab coats washed. Do we take them home and wash them there, or have to wash them in the lab, or do we have to send them to some place for washing? Does the university have a service? Some of our lab coats are worn while handling bio-hazardous material*. Thank you for your help. |
| A. | There
is no University-wide provision for laundering personal protective
equipment. Some sections of some Schools have
laundry facilities, but those are not open to others outside their
section. Providing appropriate PPE is the responsibility of the School,
the Department, and the individual supervisor. One or a
combination of these must assume the
expense for laundering (or replacing) contaminated personal protective equipment
-- such
as lab coats, smocks, coveralls, etc...
If an item is contaminated with hazardous chemicals, then under the requirements of the CHP and the recommendations of OSHA and the National Safety Council, the item may NOT be taken home for cleaning, nor may it be sent out to the cleaners without special information and handling instructions. No definition of this term (contaminated with hazardous chemicals) has been adopted, so the recommended working definition would be the one used for classifying waste as hazardous waste. If an item is not contaminated with hazardous chemicals (or human pathogens, or radioisotopes), then it is merely soiled with normal daily dirt and dust and there is not a restriction upon laundering it at home. (However, an employer may not REQUIRE the employee to take required PPE home for cleaning.) Some people launder their lab coats in the lab sink and hang them in the lab to dry. Some groups have contracted laundry pick-up and delivery services with local commercial laundries. What is required is that the laundry be labeled (1) that it ISN'T or IS or MIGHT BE contaminated with..... list of known or potential contaminants, and the PPE which should be worn by the laundry personnel when handling to guard against risks posed by the (potential) contaminants. An alternative to laundering is to dispose of the item(s) and buy new ones. If the item is contaminated to the extent that it fits the definition of hazardous waste (or category I bio-waste, or rad waste....), it must be disposed of as hazardous waste or cat I bio-waste or rad waste. If it is not, it may be disposed of in the regular trash. |
*The use of "biohazardous material" above is not specific enough, especially given the non-standard use of the term. There are many people, intelligent people, who will refer to a chemical which is hazardous to biological systems, such as phenol, as a biohazardous substance. This is quite completely wrong, but unavoidable. It is necessary to learn what exactly the questioner here is talking about before answering that particular point. If the lab coat has dog blood on it? Not a required decon unless there's a reason to believe the dog blood contains human pathogens. Human vomit, urine, other body fluids or blood on the lab coat? Now that would require decontamination before laundering or disposal.
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| [Chemistry]
[REM] [Physical
Facilities ] [Administrative
Information Service] [Purdue
University] http://www.chem.purdue.edu/safety | send comments to: swihart@purdue.edu | last review/update May 04, 2005 |