Even after the tremendous expansion of medical services over the last few decades, healthcare in Kashmir still leaves a lot to be desired.

Be it the lack of machinery in our top most hospitals, lack of staff in the medical colleges or adequate laboratory back up in the government hospitals, the lacunae are obvious and visible.

The government may take the ruse of lack of resources for bringing healthcare up to date with at least the current standards in hospitals outside Kashmir, but there are some things which can’t wait for the official, financial or even bureaucratic, convenience. One such area is the disposal of the waste, biomedical and domestic, generated in the hospitals.

Hospital waste management and disposal is a scientific exercise and the job needs to be entrusted to the people qualified for it. In hospitals across Kashmir, tons of waste are generated everyday and as per experts’ estimates 15 percent of the waste is biomedical. There are set guidelines from IPHC and World Health organization for segregation, handling and disposal of such waste. The biomedical waste generated in the hospitals is highly hazardous and can be a cause of spread of various deadly infections like HIV, Hepatitis C to name just two.

The sharps, needles and other biomedical waste has to be disposed off in a scientific way to avert threat to public health and environment. However, even our premier hospitals do not have the capacity or enough qualified manpower to dispose off all the biomedical waste generated in these hospitals. A used syringe, drip-set, catheter, blood bag or a urine bag can be detrimental to the life of the person handling it or a threat to the environment.

A visit to any hospital backyard will reveal how all kinds of waste is dumped together. The protocol of segregating the waste according to the level of hazard it carries is not followed properly and as a result all kinds of waste are clubbed together and dumped anywhere the sanitation staff finds it convenient. Even the premier hospitals in Kashmir lack needle crushers, which are necessary to avoid infections. The staff mostly seems oblivious of the colour coding standards of waste management. Rag pickers can be seen sifting through the hospital waste looking for recyclables, which is sent to factories outside Kashmir.

The need to set up waste disposal plants in all districts of Kashmir can’t be overlooked anymore. A concerted effort – of imparting training to the staff, setting up infrastructure and taking the problem seriously – must be initiated at the earliest to avert spread of infection and to save the environment.

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