Incineration-only treatment for tissues, organs, and identifiable anatomical waste. Same-day from our Central Maryland hub — same-week pickup windows for Baltimore healthcare generators.
Pathological waste — recognizable tissue, organs, body parts, and anatomical specimens — cannot be autoclaved. Maryland regulations and CDC guidance require treatment by incineration in a permitted medical waste incinerator. We provide leak-proof, opaque pathology containers, refrigerated transport when needed, and incineration with witnessed Certificates of Destruction for cremation-grade chain of custody.
Notable nearby: Johns Hopkins Hospital, University of Maryland Medical Center, Mercy Medical Center, Sinai Hospital.
| Agency / Rule | What it requires |
|---|---|
| Maryland Department of the Environment COMAR 26.13.11.06 | Pathological waste must be treated by incineration; alternative treatment is not permitted. |
| CDC Guidelines for Environmental Infection Control | Recommends incineration for recognizable anatomical waste and pathological specimens. |
| EPA 40 CFR Part 60 Subpart Ec | Performance standards for hospital/medical/infectious waste incinerators (HMIWI). |
Maryland-based dispatch. No call centers, no contracts you can't read.
Request a Quote Call 1-240-518-7862No. Maryland and most states prohibit autoclave treatment of recognizable anatomical waste because autoclaving does not destroy identifiable tissue. Incineration is required.
Extracted teeth without amalgam are typically managed as regulated medical waste. Teeth with amalgam are managed separately as dental amalgam waste under EPA and Maryland dental amalgam rules. Recognizable oral surgery tissue is handled as pathological waste.