The present invention relates to the medical waste and more particularly to systems and a method for the destruction of disposable medical devices and sterilization of infectious medical waste.
Infectious Waste is defined as any waste that may contain infectious material such as body fluids, blood and any disposable devices, such as needles, syringes or scalpel blades, that may have come in contact with these elements. Sharps are any device or object used to puncture or lacerate the skin, and include needles, syringes, lancets and scalpel blades.
Various known systems for the safe management and disposal of infection waste and sharps provide infectious waste sterilization and sharps destruction. These systems make the sharps safe for disposal. Some of these systems melt a syringe and needle into a sterile plastic puck and some destroy the needle or otherwise render the needle harmless. Generally, these prior known systems that melt and sterilize sharps and infectious waste are cost prohibitive, heavy, bulky and are not very portable.
A portable medical waste processing system includes a processing device having an enclosure with a housing and lid, at least one cylindrical heater inside the housing, a filtration system in the lid, a control system in the housing and a cooling system in the housing, and a medical waste container for each cylindrical heater. Needles, syringes, lancets and other sharps are placed inside the medical waste container and the medical waste container is placed inside the cylindrical heater. The control system has an interlock that assures that the lid is closed and that prevents opening of the lid during operation of the processing device, and a container sensor that assures that a medical waste container is in the cylindrical heater before operation of the processing device. The processing device has a bill acceptor and/or credit card acceptor to be used in a vending application, a DC-AC Power Inverter for operation from a DC power supply source such as a DC battery or a Solar Panel, and a barcode reader for reading barcodes on medical waste containers. The method includes heating the medical waste container for a selected time period at a selected temperature, detecting a power interruption, identifying the power interruption as short-term or long-term, and reinitiating the heating for the entire time period after a long-term power interruption.
Details of this invention are described in connection with the accompanying drawings that bear similar reference numerals in which:
Referring to
A filtration system 27 mounts in the lid 19 of the enclosure 16, above the open end 25 of the interior cavity 23 of the heater 21. The filtration system 27 has a replaceable carbon cartridge 28. The processing device 12 includes a cooling system 30 having at least one fan 31. The fan 31 shown is a two speed fan with a speed tachometer and is mounted to the bottom of the housing 17 of the enclosure 16.
The processing device 12 has a control system 34 with a programmable controller 35 that has non-volatile memory 36, a real-time clock 40 and a battery 43 to power the clock 40 during power interruptions. The clock 40 and battery 43 provide a means for tracking the current time. Other means for tracking the current time can be used, such as a communications link to an atomic clock, a cellular network or an internet clock. By way of example, and not as a limitation, the controller 35 can include a microprocessor. The controller 35 connects to the heater 21, and to the fan 31 of the cooling system 30. The controller 35 activates the fan 31, and the fan 31 sends fan speed feedback to the controller 35.
The control system 34 also includes an electrically activated lid latch, shown as lid latching solenoid 37, an interlock 38, a container sensor 39, a temperature sensor, shown as a thermocouple 41 and a thermal cutoff 42, all of which connect to the controller 35. The lid latching solenoid 37 mounts on the housing 17 of the enclosure 16, and secures the lid 18 when activated. The interlock 38 connects to the lid latching solenoid 37, indicating to the controller 35 when the lid 18 is secured. The container sensor 39 mounts on the lid 18, over the open end 25 of the interior cavity 23 of the heater 21, and the thermocouple 41 and the thermal cutoff 42 each mount on the side of the heater 21.
A bill acceptor 44 and a credit card acceptor 45 mount on the exterior of housing 17 and connect to the controller 35. A DC to AC inverter 46 mounts in the housing 17 and also connects to the controller 35. A barcode reader 47 mounts on the exterior of housing 17 and connects to the controller 35.
The medical waste container 14 shown in
Referring again to
The container sensor 39 provides feedback to the controller 35, indicating that a medical waste container 14 is in place inside the cavity 23 in the heater 21, allowing the heating cycle to begin. The container sensor 39 also indicates to the controller 35 that the medical waste container 14 fits correctly inside the cavity 23 and is a medical waste container 14 specifically designed for the processing device 12. The fan 31 is activated at low speed by the controller 35 when the heating cycle begins.
The fan 31 is activated at high speed once the heating process has concluded and cools the medical waste container 14 so that the medical waste container 14 can be removed safely. The fan 31 is deactivated once the medical waste container 14 has cooled for removal from the processing device 12. The cooling system 30 regulates the heat and provides cooling to the sides walls of the enclosure 16 and also provides cooling for safe removal of the medical waste container 14. After the heating process has concluded and the medical waste container 14 has cooled to a selected second temperature, the latching solenoid 37 is deactivated so that the lid 19 can be opened. By way of example, the second temperature can be about 120° F.
The heater 21 is capable of reaching high temperatures designed to melt polypropylene and sterilize infectious waste. The thermocouple 41 provides continuous feedback to the controller 35 indicating the temperature of the heater 21. The thermal cutoff 42 provides upper limit temperature protection preventing the heater 21 from reaching excessive temperatures.
The control system 34 can support and control multiple interface types such as GPS, RS-232, USB 2.0, 3,0 802.15.1 Bluetooth, 802.3 Ethernet, 802.11a/b/g/n Wireless Ethernet and 802.15.5 Zigbee. The control system 34 supports multiple types of printers and data storage units such as USB flash drives, hard drive and memory card. Data stored in the non-volatile memory 36, such as but not limited to the date, time, temperature, process ID, and the barcode 51 on the medical waste container 14, can be archived on the data storage units.
The bill acceptor 44 and credit card acceptor 45 allow the processing device 12 to be placed in commercial sites where payment would be required to process a medical waste container 14. The processing device 12 nominally operates on conventional AC power. The inverter 46 allows the processing device 12 to be powered by a DC Voltage Source such as a DC battery or a Solar Panel. The inverter 46 may also be placed outside the processing device 12 as an adjunct device. The inverter 46 converts power from a DC Voltage source to the AC power required to operate the processing device 12.
The medical waste container 14 is heated to a temperature that will melt the contained syringes and sterilize the needles, lancets and infectious waste. The filtration system 27 filters any noxious odors emanating from the container during the heating process. The control system 34 regulates the heater 21 to the selected first temperature for the selected time period of processing designed to melt the syringes and sterilize all material contained within the medical waste container 14. The cooling system 30 prevents heat build-up inside the enclosure 16, cools the medical waste container 14 once the heat process is completed and also ensures that the sides of the enclosure 16 do not exceed harmful temperatures. The barcode reader 47 allows the barcode 51 on the medical waste container 14 to be scanned and stored.
When the processing device 12 is powered up, the controller 35 checks the non-volatile memory 36 to determine whether the last process cycle was completed or interrupted by a power interruption. If the last process cycle was interrupted, the controller 35 determines whether the power interruption was a short-term or a long-term power interruption. For example, a short-term power interruption may be defined as a power interruption of less than ten minutes and a long-term power interruption may be defined as a power interruption equal to or greater than ten minutes. If the power interruption was a short-term power interruption, the medical waste container is heated for the remainder of the time period of the last process cycle. If the power interruption was a long-term power interruption, the medical waste container is heated for the complete time period of a process cycle.
Referring to
Although the present invention has been described with a certain degree of particularity, it is understood that the present disclosure has been made by way of example and that changes in details of structure may be made without departing from the spirit thereof.
This application claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. §119(e) of the U.S. provisional patent application No. 61/503,649 filed Jul. 1, 2011, for the matter disclosed therein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61503649 | Jul 2011 | US |