Safe disposal of infectious medical waste remains elusive in Karachi — I
Hospitals, agencies struggle to ensure safe disposal amid weak oversight and overlapping jurisdictions
By Mukhtar Alam
KARACHI: Safe disposal of infectious medical
waste in Karachi remains a distant dream despite the presence of multiple
regulatory and implementing bodies for years — a situation raising serious
health and environmental concerns, this has emerged lately.
The Sindh capital — home to hundreds of public
and private hospitals that generate medical and infectious waste daily —
continues to await an integrated, foolproof system for its safe and scientific
collection and disposal.
Sources in health and environmental circles
blame municipalities and other government watchdogs for the looming crisis
threatening public health, the environment, and the city’s aesthetics.
Environmental experts estimate that Karachi
generates over 500 tonnes of healthcare waste every day, a sizeable portion of
which is highly infectious — particularly from operating theatres, isolation
wards, and diagnostic laboratories — yet often mishandled or improperly
disposed of.
Observers note that medical-waste collection
and disposal have increasingly fallen into the hands of private contractors
driven by profit motives, aided by the lax attitude of healthcare facilities
and the weak enforcement of health and environmental regulations.
Another observer remarked that regulators
themselves have at times acted unevenly, allowing approved waste contractors to
operate without sufficient oversight, thereby compromising timely and
scientific disposal practices.
Inconsistent
practices across hospitals
A review of hospitals and regulatory sources
by this reporter reveals serious inconsistencies in how infectious waste is
handled across Karachi.
Senior officials at the Jinnah Postgraduate
Medical Centre and the Civil Hospital Karachi said their facilities use
standard incinerators but could not share specific data, while the head of a
major child health institute declined to comment.
Two major private hospitals along Stadium
Road, however, provided detailed figures that help estimate citywide waste
volumes. Together, the Aga Khan University Hospital (AKUH) and Liaquat National
Hospital (LNH) — with a combined 1,600 beds — incinerate nearly five tonnes of
medical waste daily, or about three kilogrammes per bed per day, compared with
the World Health Organisation’s estimate of two kilogrammes per patient.
An AKUH spokesman said the hospital operates a
350-kg-per-hour incinerator at its Education City campus, disposing of around
90,000 kilogrammes of waste each month from the main site and its satellite
units. “The plant is exclusively for AKUH waste, and monthly reports are
regularly submitted to Sindh Environmental Protection Agency (SEPA),” he added.
At LNH, Syed Bashir Ali Shah, head of Clinical
Housekeeping, said the hospital produces 1.8–2 tonnes of medical waste daily
from its 700 beds. “We’ve been operating our SEPA-approved incineration plant
for five years,” he said. “All waste is segregated at source, transported
safely to the plant. We don’t accept outside waste, and all data are shared
with SEPA.”
According to researchers, roughly 85 per cent
of healthcare waste is general, non-hazardous material, while 15 per cent is
hazardous — including used syringes, sharps, swabs, and contaminated devices
and drugs.
A senior environmental expert explained that
the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation (KMC) and district municipal bodies
initially managed medical waste collection and disposal. “The system lost focus
after SEPA introduced its 2014 rules and the creation of the Sindh Solid Waste
Management Board (SSWMB),” he said.
An environmental consultant noted that SSWMB’s
weak capacity has compounded the crisis. “Hospitals are legally bound to ensure
safe disposal, but enforcement remains lax,” he said.
A senior SEPA official, requesting anonymity,
confirmed that the agency had recently reduced its list of authorised
contractors, allowing only those with operational incinerators to function —
though he could not provide updated details despite repeated requests.
Meanwhile, A Amir Habib Siddiqui of KMC’s
Medical Waste Management Department said the Mewashah incinerators remain
functional, processing four to five tonnes daily from about 120 clients. “We
continue to perform our role,” he maintained.
Originally
published in Social Track, Karachi


Ideally the Arthur findings are okay for better observation. Unfortunately parameters of incineration especially for hospital waste not designed properly considering output waste on daily basis. I would personally recommend to not compare private or govt plant. Protocol, just to make mechanisms which need to be discussed among the tested expertise
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