## Correct Answer: D. Yellow Chemical waste in healthcare facilities is segregated and disposed in **yellow bags** as per Indian biomedical waste management rules. The colour-coding system for biomedical waste segregation is mandated under the Biomedical Waste Management Rules, 2016 (amended 2018) by the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, Government of India. Yellow bags are specifically designated for **chemical waste** including expired medicines, contaminated chemicals, and hazardous chemical substances generated in laboratories, pharmacies, and clinical departments. This standardized colour-coding ensures proper segregation at the point of generation, preventing cross-contamination and enabling appropriate treatment (incineration or chemical treatment) before final disposal. The yellow bag system is universally adopted across all Indian healthcare facilities, diagnostic centres, and research laboratories. Non-compliance with this waste segregation protocol invites penalties under the Biomedical Waste Management Rules and poses occupational health hazards to sanitation workers and environmental contamination risks. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Green** — Green bags are designated for **non-hazardous, non-anatomical waste** such as general office waste, paper, cardboard, and other non-infectious materials in healthcare settings. This is a common trap as students may confuse the 'green' colour with environmental safety, but green actually represents the least hazardous category of biomedical waste. **B. White** — White bags are used for **glassware, metallic implants, and other non-hazardous inert waste** that can be recycled or disposed safely without special treatment. White does not correspond to chemical waste; this option tests whether students know the complete colour-coding hierarchy. **C. Red** — Red bags are designated for **infectious/pathological waste** including blood-soaked materials, body parts, and contaminated sharps containers. Students often confuse red (danger/infection) with chemical hazards, but red specifically indicates biological/infectious hazard, not chemical contamination. ## High-Yield Facts - **Yellow bags** = chemical waste (expired medicines, contaminated chemicals, laboratory hazardous substances) - **Red bags** = infectious/pathological waste (blood, body parts, contaminated sharps) - **Green bags** = non-hazardous general waste (office waste, paper, non-infectious materials) - **White bags** = inert waste (glassware, metallic implants, non-hazardous recyclables) - Biomedical Waste Management Rules 2016 (amended 2018) mandate colour-coding at point of generation in all Indian healthcare facilities - Chemical waste requires **incineration or chemical treatment** before final disposal, not landfill ## Mnemonics **BYGR Colour Code** **B**iological (Red) | **Y**ellow (Chemical) | **G**reen (General) | **W**hite (Inert). Remember: Yellow = hazardous chemicals needing special treatment. **Chemical = Yellow = Caution** Yellow is the universal hazard colour for chemicals in labs and industry; Indian biomedical waste rules follow this convention. Yellow bag = think 'chemical hazard' immediately. ## NBE Trap NBE may pair chemical waste with red bags (since both sound 'dangerous') to trap students who confuse infectious hazard (red) with chemical hazard (yellow). The colour-coding system requires precise memorization of category-to-colour mapping. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian hospitals, ward nurses and sanitation staff must segregate waste at bedside into the correct coloured bags immediately after generation. Misplacement of chemical waste (e.g., expired IV medications into red bags) leads to improper treatment and occupational exposure during handling, making this a high-yield PSM concept for hospital safety audits and infection control committees. _Reference: Park's Textbook of Preventive and Social Medicine (Biomedical Waste Management chapter); Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change - Biomedical Waste Management Rules, 2016 (amended 2018)_
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