Extreme care must be taken in the
management and disposal of sharps waste. The goal in sharps waste management is to safely handle all materials until they can be properly disposed of. The final step in the disposal of sharps waste is to dispose of them in an
autoclave. A less common approach is to
incinerate them; typically only
chemotherapy sharps waste is incinerated. Steps must be taken along the way to minimize the risk of injury from this material, while maximizing the amount of sharps material disposed of. Strict
hospital protocols and government regulations that instruct health care providers on how to manage sharps waste help ensure that the waste is handled as effectively and safely as possible. Disposal methods vary by country and locale, but common methods of disposal are either by truck service or, in the
United States, by disposal of sharps through the mail. Truck service involves trained personnel collecting sharps waste, and often
medical waste, at the point of generation, and hauling it away by truck to a destruction facility. Similarly, the mail-back sharps disposal method allows generators to ship sharps waste to the disposal facility directly through the
U.S. mail in specially designed and approved shipping containers. Mail-back sharps disposal allows waste generators to dispose of smaller amounts of sharps more economically than if they were to hire out a truck service. Recent legislation in
France has stated that pharmaceutical companies supplying self injection medications are responsible for the disposal of spent needles. Previously popular needle clippers and caps are no longer acceptable as safety devices, and either sharps box or needle destruction devices are required. A report by the
Canadian Mental Health Association found that
supervised injection sites help reduce the amount of discarded needles on streets. == Injection technology ==