
Veterinarian Office Medical Waste Disposal Services

We love our pets at San Diego Medical Waste!


We offer a full-service approach that fits today's veterinarian office waste needs.
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Sharps Disposal (Veterinarian)
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Sharps containers must be appropriately labeled
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Puncture resistant and leak-proof
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Should be visible and easily reachable by the person using the sharps, and not placed in high-traffic areas, under sinks, inside cabinets or near light switches.
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Download our Sharps Management for more details
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Blood-Soaked Gauze (Biohazard)
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Animal and Human alike
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Proper disposal steps include packaging it in a leak-resistant, puncture-resistant red disposable plastic bag with a universal biohazard symbol.
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X-Ray Fixer (Silver)
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Used x-ray filter solution contains a high amount of silver, and is therefore considered a hazardous waste, requiring it to be handled by a hazardous waste management company.
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Used x-ray fixer must never be flushed down the drain.
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X-ray developer that is mixed with used fixer solution must also be disposed of through a dental waste disposal company.
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Unused developer contains a toxic substance called hydroquinone, which cannot be flushed down the drain. Both unused and used developer should also never be disposed of into septic systems.
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If any carpules contain residual anesthetic in all states except Minnesota, they should be disposed of in a container properly labeled for transport as pharmaceutical waste to a medical waste incinerator. Why not place them into your regular medical waste container? Medical waste is treated by autoclave; since autoclave treatment does not breakdown pharmaceutical waste, incineration is required.
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Carpules that contain visible blood are classified as sharps medical waste and must be placed in a sharps container for proper disposal.
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Empty, unbroken carpules that contain no remaining anesthetic or aspirated blood cannot be placed in the trash for general waste disposal. Unbroken carpules go into a sharps container due to the fact that carpules could break.
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If carpules are broken but contain no blood or anesthetic, they are classified as medical waste, and offices must discard them into the sharps container for employee and waste-worker safety.
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