3.8 Article

Medical waste management of village clinics in rural China

期刊

JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH-HEIDELBERG
卷 30, 期 5, 页码 1197-1204

出版社

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s10389-020-01399-5

关键词

China; Medical waste management; Village clinics; Public health

资金

  1. 111 Project [B16031]
  2. Humanities and Social Science Project of Ministry of Education [19YJCZH151]

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The study found that village clinics in rural China generate a significant amount of medical waste, but have low compliance with national regulations regarding waste management. There is a lack of proper packaging, segregation, and appropriate disposal methods. Many village clinics also lack necessary protective equipment.
Purpose Medical waste is rising on policy agendas as a serious public health and environmental issue. The aim of this study was to assess current practices of medical waste management, which include waste generation, collection, storage, segregation, disposal, and use of protective equipment, in village clinics in rural China. Methods Based on survey results from 236 randomly selected village clinics in 21 counties from three provinces of China, we used descriptive statistics to determine the medical waste management of village clinics in sample area. Results We found that the generation rate of medical waste in sampled village clinics was approximately 0.65 kg per day or 0.17 kg/patient per day on average. Given the large number of primary healthcare facilities and population in rural areas of China, the total quantity of medical waste generated in these facilities is noteworthy. However, we also found poor compliance levels with the national regulations regarding medical waste management practices. A large proportion of medical waste was still not packed in required containers, and almost all village clinics did not segregate correctly. Moreover, a significant portion of village clinics used improper disposal methods and lacked the necessary protective equipment. Medical staff in these facilities pointed out four main difficulties in complying with national regulations: a lack of funding, equipment, designated areas, and management personnel specifically delegated for medical waste management. Conclusion These findings suggest that Chinese policymakers and health administrators should pay more attention to rural areas in addressing potentially hazardous medical waste management practices by investing financial support as well as developing specific guidelines tailored to resource-strained rural primary healthcare facilities.

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