We had an incident earlier this year in which the lab tech was stuck by TLC capillaries which had been negligently discarded into the sink by undergraduate students. This is NOT the way to dispose of waste or broken glass of ANY sort!
On Fri, 3 Jul 2015 01:01:41 -0400 Paul Harrison If you have an accommodation need for a planned meeting, please e-mail me directly and I will do my best to make appropriate arrangements. Should you require any materials sent via this e-mail address in an alternate/accessible format, please let me know
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"Samuella B. Sigmann"
> My favorite is broken shards in the holes in a sink drain. They are often the result of someone missing all the pieces of something that broke in the sink. They make it to the drain and cannot get through the holes of the drain and so the stick up. You often cannot see then and they are particularly bad when the shard goes under your nail as you reach into the drain to get something. Yes, I have done this.
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> Sammye
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> On 7/2/2015 11:25 AM, Stuart, Ralph wrote:
> > Does anyone have a relatively detailed favorite Lessons Learned report for a situation which involves significant cuts from broken glassware in a lab that doesn?t involve over-pressurization of the vessel? I?m doing a training next week for undergraduate students and I?d like to make the point that it?s not always the chemistry that creates the problem. The example I have in mind could involve hot glassware that breaks when someone tries to pick it up and drops it, but similar events would be helpful as well.
> >
> > Thanks for any assistance with this.
> >
> > - Ralph
> >
> > Ralph Stuart, CIH, CCHO
> > Chemical Hygiene Officer
> > Keene State College
> >
> > ralph.stuart**At_Symbol_Here**keene.edu
Associate Professor of Chemistry
Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology
McMaster University
1280 Main St. W., Hamilton, ON, L8S 4M1, Canada
Phone: (905)525-9140 ext. 27290; FAX: (905)522-2509