Red-bag pickup, transport, and treatment for Maryland generators of any size. ≈20 minutes from our Baltimore hub — same-week pickup windows for Dundalk healthcare generators.
Regulated medical waste is any waste contaminated with blood, body fluids, or other potentially infectious material that requires special handling under Maryland COMAR 26.13.11 and the federal Bloodborne Pathogens Standard. Maryland Medical Waste provides DOT-compliant transport vehicles, OSHA-certified handlers, and chain-of-custody manifests so generators stay audit-ready from the exam room to final treatment at a permitted treatment, storage, and disposal facility.
Notable nearby: Johns Hopkins Bayview nearby.
| Agency / Rule | What it requires |
|---|---|
| Maryland Department of the Environment COMAR 26.13.11 | Special Medical Waste regulations covering segregation, packaging, marking, storage, and transport in the State of Maryland. |
| OSHA 29 CFR 1910.1030 | Bloodborne Pathogens Standard — exposure control plan, sharps engineering controls, training, and PPE requirements. |
| U.S. DOT 49 CFR 173.197 | Hazardous materials transport packaging, marking, labeling, and shipping paper requirements for Regulated Medical Waste. |
| DEA 21 CFR 1317 | Required where controlled-substance pharmaceutical waste is co-mingled at a generator site. |
Maryland-based dispatch. No call centers, no contracts you can't read.
Request a Quote Call 1-240-518-7862Maryland defines Special Medical Waste under COMAR 26.13.11 to include cultures and stocks of infectious agents, pathological waste, human blood and blood products, contaminated sharps, certain animal waste, and isolation waste. Anything saturated with blood or OPIM (other potentially infectious material) belongs in the red bag stream.
Maryland does not exempt small quantity generators from packaging, labeling, or treatment requirements. Even a single dental practice generating a few pounds per month must transport waste in a permitted vehicle or use a registered mail-back program — household sharps drop-offs are not a substitute.
Maryland allows on-site storage up to 30 days at room temperature, or up to 90 days under refrigeration at or below 45°F. We size service frequency so generators never approach those limits.
Yes. Every pickup is accompanied by a uniform medical waste tracking document, and an electronic Certificate of Destruction is issued after final treatment. Records are retained for three years and accessible through your customer portal.