Insight into Medical Waste Management in Nigeria
By Hauwa Ali
As the world generates more and more wastes, hospitals and health centres are no exception.
Medical wastes are generated on daily bases from health care centers which are infectious, contain
toxic chemicals and pose contamination risks to both people and the environment.
If patients are to receive health care and recover in safe surroundings, medical wastes must be
disposed of safely.
Akinduro Gbenga Andrew, CEO of Agoa Waste Management Company, one of the leading medical
waste management company headquartered in Lagos, takes us into the world of Medical waste
management.
“Medical wastes are wastes generated from the hospitals. We have 2 stains of wastes generated by
the by hospital – Domestic and medical waste. Domestic wastes are wastes generated by patients
like their food, water bottles, disposable plates, while medical wastes are those generated from
treating patients, like needles, cotton wools, infection bottles, plasters etc.”
What are the economic impact of Medical waste managers?
A lot of economic benefits. For insurance, a country that is sick, can the economy grow? The issue
with medical wastes is that most governments are not seeing it the way they should see it. They just
see it as normal waste, whereas, they are very dangerous. It is the most dangerous waste. So if we
don’t tackle medical waste properly, the citizen population will be at risk and if the populace are at
risk, your economy is also at risk because it is the people that drives the economy. Take for
insurance the issue of Corona virus when it happened, the whole world was at a stand still, nothing
was happening because people are sick. Even the issue of Ebola in Lagos then too, imagined it had
happened in other states not Lagos. Thank God Lagos State had an healthcare waste management in
place to curb it. That thing would have spread if it happened elsewhere in the country because other
states are just coming up in terms of Medical waste management. So that’s the impact of managing
medical waste properly. When you have a healthy population, the economy will thrive.
How are the medical wastes managed?
Our company manages the medical wastes. We pick those wastes from the hospitals and take them
down to incinerator for destruction. The incinerator is an enclosed equipment built specially for such
thing. Just like funnex that industries use, but this time around, there’s a standard temperature
approval by the World Health Organisation which is around 950-1100° Celsius. So we fire the
incinerator to that level before we load in the medical wastes. At that level, no pathogens, bacteria
or virus can survive the destruction. When that is done, we have destroyed them all permanently so
that they will not contaminate the environment, ground water or constitute a hazard to people in
the environment.
What do the waste by-products contain?
We have ashes, some you can still see syringe needles, injection bottles, depending on the type of
incinerator. Incinerator with burners from the bottom can melt everything including bottles and
syringes at that temperature levels while incinerators with burners from top or side will not be able
to melt everything but will destroy all pathogens, virus it bacteria in those things. Like the one we
use, the bottles and syringes won’t break, but will be harmless when taken out because it has been
exposed to high level temperature. So we dispose them off at landfills.
How do you make your profit?
The hospitals pay us. We charge the hospitals after weighing their wastes in kilos and they pay.
What are your major challenges?
There are always challenges faced in the line of any job. One of our major challenges is compliance
by hospitals to segregate their waste. You still find some hospitals just pack everything together. But
with continuous enlightenment and education, we can get there. Almost all hospitals in Lagos is
aware and are complying, but other places like Oyo state, we are still having that challenge.
Governments need to help us in terms of enforcement to mandate people to separate their wastes
and not treat health care wastes as general waste. The more they treat it like general waste, there
more they endanger the lives of the populace, because if this thing spreads communicable disease
to people, there state and country’s economy will be in trouble.
Another challenge we have is manpower. The people working in the industry are few and the rate at
which those employed leave is high. People leave because they feel sigmatised, they see it as dirty
job. They are ashamed to be associated with the job. I can say about five staffs have left the
company within this year alone. They think there’s no future in it. But I always tell them it’s just the
way they see it.
As for me, I am proud of what I doing. I always tell people I’m a ‘wastepreneur’. That’s my
profession, that’s my calling. I’m not ashamed of my job. But somehow people look down on you
when you tell them you’re a waste manager. I am a graduate and I have one of the highest
certificate in project management but this is what I’m called to do. This job has taken me to places, I
have attended conferences in the U.S. on this job.
Is there any government policy affecting your business?
In the area of policy making, Lagos already had policies in place that’s making it easy for us. But
other states don’t have. We are even the ones trying to create for them. For instance here in Lagos,
we don’t have problem with handling medical wastes because the government also go around to
check waste management practice in hospitals and those that are not handling their wastes properly
gets fined. So it makes them cooperate and do the right things. We still want government to still
help to ensure total compliance as few hospitals still don’t comply with the separation of waste.
What inspired you into the business?
I’ve always wanted to do the business since I was young, like while I was in secondary school. I’ve
planned my life towards such things, so when I finished university, I just worked in a place for 3 years
and I started this business. It’s just like a calling for me, that’s the way I see it.
How did you cope with the great of infection?
I’m an engineering student. I studied agric engineering. I already understood health safety and all
that. Waste management was also pay off what we were taught. So I Know that when you follow
process, the issue of infection will not be there. I always tell my staffs, don’t eat inside the waste
van, go and eat outside and come back. Those little little safety instructions are very important. And
for the past 12-15 years, we have never had any issue with me or any of my staffs.
How do you hope to end the stigmatization associated with the business?
We have a foundation that trains people. Our objective is to set up a health care waste management
system in every state in the country. So we have started training people in Ibadan, we’ve been able
to raise awareness there, we’ve raised the economic value of those people doing it compared to
what they’re earning before elsewhere. So that’s what we do. When we enter a state, in as much as
the government gives us free hand to do the job for them, we train the citizens, bring all
stakeholders together and let them know why we need to do this .
We just need the governments to help us enlighten the wider population on the dangers of
abandoning the healthcare waste sector. Government should help enlighten people that the job is
safe. After all, Nigerians travel abroad to do these things to survive, but why won’t they do it for
their country.