Knowledge and Compliance Regarding Clinical Refuse Handling Among Diverse Oral Health Personnel: A Facility-Oriented Investigation
Keywords:
Clinical refuse management, biomedical waste, oral health personnel, compliance behaviorAbstract
Clinical refuse management in oral healthcare facilities represents a critical intersection of occupational safety, environmental protection, and infection control. Despite global guidelines emphasizing standardized biomedical waste handling protocols, compliance remains inconsistent across healthcare cadres, particularly in low- and middle-income settings. This study investigates knowledge levels and compliance behaviors regarding clinical refuse handling among diverse oral health personnel in facility-based environments, drawing upon existing empirical evidence and interdisciplinary literature.
The review synthesizes findings from studies focusing on pharmacists, dental professionals, and healthcare workers engaged in oral and community health systems. Evidence indicates that while awareness of waste management principles is generally moderate to high, actual compliance is hindered by infrastructural limitations, inadequate training, and systemic policy gaps. The increasing involvement of non-dental personnel, particularly pharmacists, in oral health advisory roles further complicates waste handling dynamics due to role expansion without corresponding training frameworks (Mann et al., 2015; Cohen, 2013).
The study is conceptually grounded in occupational safety theory and behavioral compliance frameworks, emphasizing the relationship between knowledge acquisition, institutional support systems, and adherence to clinical protocols. Comparative analysis highlights variability in compliance behaviors across regions and professional categories, with notable disparities in developing healthcare systems (Hassali et al., 2009; Offu et al., 2015).
Findings suggest that biomedical waste mismanagement persists as a systemic challenge influenced by behavioral, institutional, and regulatory factors. The study further contextualizes these findings within broader healthcare waste frameworks, referencing biomedical waste awareness studies among dental healthcare workers (Arshad et al., 2022), which emphasize the importance of institutional training and compliance monitoring systems.
The research concludes that improving compliance requires integrated interventions combining education, infrastructure development, and policy enforcement. Strengthening interprofessional training and embedding waste management competencies within oral healthcare curricula are essential for sustainable improvement.
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