Management – ACTUAL Exam Study Guide
2026/2027
⭐ Complete Questions with Correct Detailed Answers |
Recent Version | High Pass Success
Prepare confidently for your Waste Disposal Management Exam with this comprehensive and
up-to-date study guide (2026/2027 Edition). This resource is designed to help you master key
concepts, understand regulations, and pass your exam with ease.
Inside, you’ll find complete exam questions with correct detailed answers, carefully
structured to reflect real exam standards. Each question includes a clear and well-explained
answer, helping you understand the reasoning and apply knowledge effectively.
🔥 Key Highlights
✔ Actual exam-style questions covering core waste management topics
✔ Correct answers with detailed explanations
✔ Focus on environmental regulations and best practices
✔ Clear, organized format for quick revision
✔ Recent updated version (2026/2027) for accurate preparation
🌍 Topics Covered
• Waste classification and handling procedures
• Solid and hazardous waste management
• Environmental protection laws and regulations
• Waste treatment, recycling, and disposal methods
• Safety standards and compliance practices
• Sustainable waste management strategies
🚀 Why This Study Guide Works
,This guide helps you focus on important topics, improve understanding, and build exam
confidence. Practicing with real exam-style questions and reviewing detailed answers allows you
to identify weak areas and strengthen your knowledge quickly.
🎯 Ideal For
• Waste management certification exam candidates
• Environmental and public health students
• Professionals in sanitation and waste services
• Last-minute revision and intensive study
• Anyone aiming to pass with confidence and improve performance
📚 A reliable and effective study resource designed to help you prepare smarter, strengthen
your knowledge, and succeed in your Waste Disposal Management exam.
diseases caused by blood borne pathogens -ANSWER✅✅✅- HIV/aids
- hepatitis B
- arboviral infections
- brucellosis
- Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
- hepatits C
- leptospirosis
what is infectious medical waste -ANSWER✅✅✅Infectious medical waste is defined
as medical waste capable of producing an infectious disease.
Waste is considered infectious when it is:
- contaminated by an organism that is pathogenic to healthy humans;
- the organism is not routinely available in the environment and
- the organism is in significant quantity and virulence to transmit disease.
infectious waste specifically are -ANSWER✅✅✅- blood and blood products in a free
flowing, unabsorbed state;
- contaminated sharps,
- isolation wastes,
- laboratory wastes, and
- unfixed pathological tissue
,autoclaved -ANSWER✅✅✅- red bag steam or heat kills off bacteria
infectious laboratory waste -ANSWER✅✅✅- cultures
- etiological agents
- specimens
- stocks
- related contaminated wastes
- vaccine vials
pathological wastes -ANSWER✅✅✅- fixed pathological are not infectious medical
waste
- unfixed pathological wastes must be incinerated
- wastes containing pathological items must be appropriately labeled to ensure they are
incinerated.
packaging and storage -ANSWER✅✅✅wastes shall be collected in a lined, cardboard
box or reusable plastic container that is labeled with the biohazard symbol and
appropriate wording.
- once the box or container is full the bag lining it must be sealed and the container then
sealed shut
- boxes must be labeled with facility name, address, phone and fax numbers and the
date
- a full, sealed container can be stored on site for no more than 30 days
infectious isolation wastes -ANSWER✅✅✅- wastes generated from the care of a
patient who has or is suspected of having a disease caused by a CDC class 4 agent,
listed below
class 4 viral agents:
- smallpox, monkey pox, white pox.
disposal of isolation wastes -ANSWER✅✅✅- isolation wastes that do not meet the
definition of infectious medical waste should be separated and disposed in the general
waste stream
- disposable gowns
- face masks
- shoe covers
All waste from an isolation room should be treated with the caution and the appropriate
PPE must be worn during handling and disposal
infectious waste is not -ANSWER✅✅✅- used personal hygiene products
- gauze and dressing containing small amounts of blood
- fixed pathological tissues
- uncontaminated medical tubing and device
Tubing with any visible fluid must be disposed in the biohazard waste
, infectious waste do not include -ANSWER✅✅✅- human remains and body parts being
used for medical purposes, under the control of a licensed doctor or dentist
- human remains lawfully interred in a cemetery or in preparation for interment
- hair, nails, and extracted teeth
preventing disease transmission -ANSWER✅✅✅- the single most effective measure to
control the transmission of blood borne pathogens is:
UNIVERSAL PRECAUTIONS
- treat all human blood and other potentially infectious materials like they are infectious
for hepatitis B and HIV
collection of infectious waste -ANSWER✅✅✅- infectious medical waste must be
collected at the point of generation in the appropriate color coded bag
- orange bags for autoclaved waste, red bags for all other treatment methods
- biohazard bags must be labeled with the international biohazard symbol and
appropriate wording; "biohazard, biochemical waste, infectious medical waste< or
regulated medical waste"
sharps -ANSWER✅✅✅- must be collected at the point of generation in a leak proof
and puncture resistant container
- containers must beat the international biohazard symbol and appropriate wording
- containers should never be completely filled, nor filled above the full line indicated on
box.
liquid infectious medical wastes -ANSWER✅✅✅Liquid infectious medical waste the
contents of suction canisters, may be disposed of in several ways:
- placed directly in the biohazard waste
- poured down a sanitary sewer
- solidified using an approved disinfectant solidified using an approved discarded in the
solid waste
packaging and storage -ANSWER✅✅✅waste shall be conducted in a lined, cardboard
box or reusable plastic container that is labeled with the biohazard symbol and
appropriate wording
- once the box or container is full the bag lining it must be sealed and the container then
sealed shut
- boxes must be labeled with facility name, address, phone and fax # and the date
- a full sealed container can be stored on site for no more than 30 days
blood and fluid borne pathogen exposure -ANSWER✅✅✅exposures to blood and fluid
borne pathogens in the medical setting typically occur by one of the following:
- puncture from contaminated needles, broken glass, or other sharps
- contact btw non-intact (cut, abraded, acne, or sunburned) skin and infectious body
fluids
- direct contact btw mucous membranes and infectious body fluids