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Smart ways of hospital wastewater management, regulatory standards and conventional treatment techniques: A short review

Nadeem Ahmad Khan (Department of Civil Engineering, Jamia Millia Islamia Central University, New Delhi, India)
Saif Ullah Khan (Department of Civil Engineering, Faculty of Engineering and Technology, Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh, India)
Sirajuddin Ahmed (Jamia Millia Islamia Central University, New Delhi, India)
Izharul Haq Farooqi (Aligarh College of Engineering and Technology, Aligarh, India)
Arshad Hussain (Department of Civil Engineering, Zakir Hussain College of Engineering and Technology, Aligarh, India)
Sergij Vambol (Kharkiv Petro Vasylenko National Technical University of Agriculture, Kharkiv, Ukraine)
Viola Vambol (Public Agency “National Scientific and Research Institute of Industrial Safety and Occupational Safety and Health”, Kiev, Ukraine)

Smart and Sustainable Built Environment

ISSN: 2046-6099

Article publication date: 22 October 2019

Issue publication date: 11 December 2020

467

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to cover some aspects about the disposal and regulatory standard around the world toward hospital effluent discharge, its managements and treatment technologies that are adopted and best suitable nowadays.

Design/methodology/approach

Due to large and variety of antibiotics available in the market nowadays it is difficult to control its use, thereby risking the whole ecosystem and its components. The regulation pattern is variable depending upon the various factors in different countries. The permissible limit of these emerging pollutants found in sewage as compared to in hospital effluent streams having active pharmaceutical ingredients is very narrow and is a debatable issue.

Findings

The disparity in the available legislation for hospital waste management in different countries makes it difficult to compare pro’s and con’s of methods adopted. Strict laws need to be framed for hospital wastewater management and its treatment, as it contains harmful compounds in higher concentrations resulting in development of resistant genes. The guideline applicable nowadays makes it clear that, specific management guidelines with respect to HWW, but also indicate certain characteristics that can be represented to specify their nature and indicator.

Research limitations/implications

Determination of effluent characteristic for each specialized treatment need to be analyzed for meeting the framed regulatory standards. Up-gradation of existing treatment facilities, adopting new technologies and improving operation, maintained is a viable option. As there are no specific treatment schemes available hence combination and optimization of treatment methods may solve the problem to certain extent.

Practical implications

There is some flexibility also there so that law framework can be modified accordingly. For any health facilities direct discharges into natural water bodies it effluent need to follow national discharge standards. These are quite strict as compared to indirect standards and generally not meet by such facilities. This is quite logical because they are not being monitored or treated by municipal systems.

Social implications

The law indicates that hospital needed to collect and treat effluent according to the treatment standards. But on other hand the law was made making it consideration about the HWW collection in water bodies.

Originality/value

The best way of management as described, is to treat HWW onsite-dividing into primary, secondary and tertiary. The document also provides details about sludge disposal, possible reuse, including the application of new and innovative treatment technologies for HWW. It also provides guidance for minimum approach for HWW management because developing countries patients do not have proper sanitation facilities.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Authors acknowledge and are thankful to the Mewat Engineering College as well as Aligarh Muslim University by providing instrumentation facilities for this research.

This paper forms part of a special section “Smart Cities: Sustainable Technologies & Challenges“, guest edited by Monika Khurana.

Citation

Khan, N.A., Ullah Khan, S., Ahmed, S., Farooqi, I.H., Hussain, A., Vambol, S. and Vambol, V. (2020), "Smart ways of hospital wastewater management, regulatory standards and conventional treatment techniques: A short review", Smart and Sustainable Built Environment, Vol. 9 No. 4, pp. 727-736. https://doi.org/10.1108/SASBE-06-2019-0079

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited

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