[Pharmwaste] Pharmaceutical Corrosives

Jeff Hollar jhollar at pwaste.com
Tue Oct 14 12:57:29 EDT 2008


Sue,

 

In our Waste-ID software, we classify pharmaceutical waste as a hazardous
corrosive (D002, yes D002) if it has a pH of less than or equal to 2 or
greater than or equal to

12.5 (40 CFR Part 261.22).  An example of an acutely hazardous liquid
pharmaceutical waste would be Physostigmine Salicylate (P188), as it is a
P-Listed waste.  P-listed wastes are

commercial chemical products which are classified as acutely hazardous under
RCRA.

 

Jeff Hollar

President

 

PharmWaste Technologies, Inc.

4164 NW Urbandale Dr., Suite A

Urbandale, IA 50322

(P) 515-276-5302 Ext. 316

(F) 480-393-5564

(E) Jhollar at Pwaste.com

 

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From: Sue Dayton [mailto:sdayton at swcp.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, October 14, 2008 10:10 AM
To: 'Jeff Hollar'; pharmwaste at lists.dep.state.fl.us
Cc: 'Carolyn Cole'
Subject: RE: [Pharmwaste] Pharmaceutical Corrosives

 

Hi Jeff:

I have a question for you from a friend - do you know what is the ph level
(or other factor) is for classifying such liquids and solutions as acutely
hazardous vs. hazardous vs non-hazardous?

Thank you!

 

 

Sue Dayton

Blue Ridge Environmental Defense League

North Carolina Healthy Communities Program

PO BOX 44

Saxapahaw, NC 27340

(336) 525-2003

sdayton at swcp.com

 

 

 

Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.
-  Martin Luther King Jr.

 

 

 

  _____  

From: pharmwaste-bounces at lists.dep.state.fl.us
[mailto:pharmwaste-bounces at lists.dep.state.fl.us] On Behalf Of Jeff Hollar
Sent: Tuesday, October 14, 2008 10:06 AM
To: pharmwaste at lists.dep.state.fl.us
Subject: [Pharmwaste] Pharmaceutical Corrosives

 

I just posted this on the Practice Greenhealth listserve, but thought it
would be beneficial to many of the members of this Pharmwaste listserve as
well.  

 

Many of our hospital pharmacy customers are surprised to find out that their
pharmaceutical inventory contains potentially corrosive waste other than a
few compounding chemicals.  One good example of this is Sporanox Solution by
JOM.  A review of the package insert indicates a target pH of 2.   We have
performed internal tests and found the mode average pH to be closer to 1.  A
liquid waste with a pH of 1 is considered corrosive waste by the EPA and
carries an EPA waste code of D003.  It is also considered corrosive when
shipping by the DOT and carries a DOT shipping number of 8.

We have found the pharmaceutical corrosive waste stream to be overlooked in
many of the pharmaceutical inventories that we've analyzed.  For those
pharmacies performing their own waste identification analysis, I would
encourage them to closely review the pH's of the liquids and solutions in
their inventory.  

 

Jeff Hollar

President

PharmWaste Technologies, Inc.

Urbandale, IA 50322

Email: jhollar at pwaste.com

Website: www.pwaste.com

515-276-5302

 

 

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