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Mercury in Health Care: WHO Policy Paper

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Title: Mercury in Health Care: WHO Policy Paper


1
Mercury in Health Care WHO Policy Paper
  • Hisashi Ogawa
  • WHO Western Pacific Regional Office

2
Sources of mercury in health care
  • Thermometers
  • Sphygmomanometers
  • Dental amalgam
  • Gastrointestinal tubes
  • Laboratory chemicals
  • Pharmaceutical products
  • Electrical applications
  • Medical waste incineration, open burning, burning
    in barrels, gasification, pyrolysis, etc.

3
Occupational exposure to mercury
  • Common pathway is inhalation of mercury vapours
    (odourless and colourless)
  • Permissible concentration for occupational
    exposure by NIOSH 0.05 mg/m3
  • Equipment breakage and spills occur frequently,
    but risk perception is low
  • Spillage accident is often not reported, and
    handled carelessly with no protective gear

4
Mercury release from health care
  • Health care facilities are one of the main
    sources of mercury release into the atmosphere
    because of emissions from medical waste
    incineration
  • Health care facilities are responsible for
    mercury pollution taking place in water bodies
    from the release of untreated wastewater
  • Mercury contained in dental amalgam is the
    greatest source of mercury vapour in
    non-industrial settings

5
Strategies
  • WHO recognizes that a significant portion of
    mercury release comes from the health-care
    sector, and therefore proposes to work with
    countries through the following strategies
  • Short- term
  • Medium-term
  • Long-term

6
Short-term strategies
  • Develop clean up and waste handling procedures
  • Procedures should include
  • - Spill clean up response,
  • - Educational programmes
  • - Use of protective gear
  • - Waste storage containment
  • - Staff training
  • Countries to initiate phasing out process

7
Medium-term strategies
  • Reduce the number of unnecessary use of mercury
    equipment
  • Inventory of mercury use and the categorization
    of items into immediate replaceable and gradually
    replaceable
  • Return of replaceable devices to the manufacturer
    or to the provider of alternative devices
  • Progressively discourage the sale and use of
    mercury containing devices
  • Ensure support to countries so that recovered
    mercury equipment is not recycled back to the
    supply chain

8
Long-term strategies
  • Support a ban of use of mercury devices and
    promote the use of alternatives
  • Support in developing implementing national
    plan, policies legislation on mercury
  • Support allocation of human and financial
    resources
  • Promoting principles of environmentally sound
    management of health-care waste under the Basel
    Convention
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