
doi: 10.1089/hs.2016.0013
pmid: 27830940
Rapid development and advancement of bioresearch at a university's laboratories can have both positive and negative implications for public health and the environment. Many research activities in which biological materials have been created, modified, stored, and manipulated require safety procedures to keep the negative effects on humans and the environment as low as possible. The Occupational Health, Safety and Environmental (OHS&E) Department of the University of Indonesia (UI) is trying to increase the awareness and responsibility of its university members and laboratory staffs who work with biohazard materials by creating a biorisk checklist. The checklist was developed based on WHO guidelines and the National University of Singapore (NUS) Laboratory Manual, which contains 311 questions about the management, administration, and handling of various hazards, recombinant experiments, and animal and plant experiments. A gap analysis was run against the checklist in 14 laboratories at the University of Indonesia Salemba campus, which daily works with highly infectious pathogens and high-risk agents. Overall result showed that none of these laboratories had met all of the checklist items, and there were only 2 laboratories that had implemented more than half of the items. This checklist was proven to be a simple tool for assessing laboratories that handle and store biohazard materials, and it could be used as a monitoring tool for biorisk programs as well. It also could be further developed as a laboratory software application to increase its effectiveness and its accuracy.
Safety Management, Biomedical Research, Universities, DNA, Recombinant, Containment of Biohazards, Plants, Hazardous Substances, Checklist, Indonesia, Occupational Exposure, Communicable Disease Control, Animals, Humans, Laboratories, Occupational Health
Safety Management, Biomedical Research, Universities, DNA, Recombinant, Containment of Biohazards, Plants, Hazardous Substances, Checklist, Indonesia, Occupational Exposure, Communicable Disease Control, Animals, Humans, Laboratories, Occupational Health
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