KARACHI: Despite being the largest public sector hospital in the city and among the few that have an incinerator, the Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre (JMPC) at present doesn’t have a proper system to dispose of its medical waste, a major potential threat to the safety of its staff, patients as well as the community at large, it emerged on Sunday.
During a recent visit to the JPMC’s incinerator located on its premises, feral cats and birds were found scavenging among the piles of waste, which included hazardous medical refuse such as empty bottles, used needles, syringes, IV bags, blood bags and soiled dressings.
The incinerator was found non-operational.
Upon contact, deputy director of administration at the JPMC Dr Javed Jamali said the incinerator was operated only when sufficient waste was collected.
“It is operated daily but only for two to three hours. There are many healthcare facilities in the city which don’t even have this mechanism,” he said, admitting that hospital waste shouldn’t have been thrown out in the open.
The hospital incinerator, he said, was too old but couldn’t be replaced owing to a shortage of funds.
To a question whether the hospital has a system to segregate hazardous and non-hazardous refuse at source, he said: “This protocol is adopted only for high-risk patients, for instance, those who are diagnosed with hepatitis and Congo virus infection.”
Endorsing the opinion that most healthcare facilities in the city are operating without a waste disposal system, executive member of the Medical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases Society of Pakistan, Dr Altaf Ahmed said that such a mechanism existed at a few private hospitals only.
“The Abbasi Shaheed Hospital and the Civil Hospital Karachi, the two major government hospitals in the city, had also bought incinerators a long time back but I don’t know whether they are still being used,” he said.