Chemical disinfection in healthcare settings exposes workers to respiratory sensitisers, skin irritants, and toxic vapours from products including glutaraldehyde, peracetic acid, sodium hypochlorite, and quaternary ammonium compounds. Glutaraldehyde — used for high-level disinfection of endoscopes and surgical instruments — is one of the most potent respiratory sensitisers in any workplace and has a workplace exposure limit of 0.05 ppm ceiling. Workers in endoscopy suites, sterile services departments, and dental surgeries face the highest exposure concentrations. This template covers all chemical disinfection procedures with controls mapped to the binding codes effective 1 July 2026.
WHS Regulation 2025 Part 7.1 — Hazardous Chemicals
Work involving hazardous chemicals (disinfectants, sterilants)
Managing Risks of Hazardous Chemicals in the Workplace (binding 1 July 2026 under Section 26A)
Yes — Hazardous Chemicals code binding July 2026. Non-compliance is admissible as evidence of breach.
| Hazard | Consequence | Likelihood |
|---|---|---|
| Glutaraldehyde vapour inhalation during instrument reprocessing | Respiratory sensitisation, occupational asthma, skin sensitisation | Possible |
| Peracetic acid splash during automated endoscope reprocessing | Severe chemical burns to skin and eyes | Possible |
| Chlorine gas release from mixing incompatible cleaning products | Acute respiratory distress, chemical pneumonitis | Unlikely |
| Skin irritation and dermatitis from repeated disinfectant contact | Contact dermatitis, chronic skin condition | Likely |
| Quaternary ammonium compound inhalation from spray application | Respiratory irritation, occupational asthma | Possible |
Endoscopy reprocessing staff developed occupational asthma from glutaraldehyde exposure. Facility used open-tray manual reprocessing without LEV and did not provide health monitoring.
2024 — WorkSafe Victoria Prosecution Database
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