What waste your nursing homes, assisted living actually generates
Most practices don't realize how much regulated medical waste they generate, or how it should be classified. Here are the main categories you're dealing with:
// Waste type
Sharps
Insulin pens and needles, lancets for blood glucose monitoring, IV needles, vacutainer needles, finger-stick supplies. High volume in diabetes-heavy populations.
// Waste type
Regulated medical waste (red bag)
Wound care dressings with blood, contaminated PPE, used catheters and tubing, blood-soaked incontinence products. Largest category.
// Waste type
Pharmaceutical waste
Discontinued medications, expired meds, partial medication carts, unused drug doses. Substantial in long-term care.
// Waste type
Controlled substances (Schedule II-V)
Hospice and end-of-life care frequently involves morphine and similar Schedule II drugs. DEA-compliant destruction required.
// Waste type
Pathological waste
Wound debridement tissue, surgical waste from in-house procedures.
What you should be paying
Real pricing ranges from regional and local operators in the WasteWise directory. National operators typically charge 1.5-3x these numbers for the same service.
// Small assisted living facility
$200-400/mo
30-50 beds, weekly pickup
Often paying significantly above market on legacy contracts.
// Mid-size nursing home
$400-800/mo
100-150 beds, weekly to 2x weekly pickup
Most common range. Real opportunity for negotiation.
// Large skilled nursing facility / hospice
$800-2000+/mo
150+ beds, 2x weekly to daily pickup
Substantial leverage at this volume.
If you're paying significantly more than the upper end of your range: you're almost certainly on a national-operator contract loaded with junk fees. Use our invoice analyzer to see exactly where the markup is.
Regulations that apply specifically to your industry
Beyond general state biomedical waste rules, here are the compliance requirements that hit your industry hardest:
CMS Conditions of Participation (Skilled Nursing)
42 CFR 483 includes infection control standards that reference proper waste management. Cited frequently during surveys.
DEA controlled substance disposal
Hospice and end-of-life Schedule II drugs require DEA-compliant destruction (DEA Form 41). Improper disposal is a federal violation.
OSHA Bloodborne Pathogens Standard
Applies to all care staff with potential blood exposure. Annual training, exposure control plan, sharps injury log.
State biomedical waste rules
Most states regulate LTCs as biomedical waste generators with on-site storage limits (typically 30 days) and registered transporter requirements.
HIPAA-compliant document destruction
Medical records mixed in with general waste are a HIPAA violation. Secure shredding service required for paper PHI.
This is not legal advice. Regulations vary by state and change frequently. Verify current requirements with your state regulatory agency, your medical director, or qualified legal counsel before making compliance decisions.
Junk fees to watch for on your invoice
If your current waste invoice has any of these line items, you're almost certainly being marked up. Most regional operators don't charge any of these.
✗ "Energy recovery fee"
Standard 6.8% Stericycle junk fee. No related service.
✗ "Variable container fee"
If your contract bills per container, audit usage carefully — overbilling is common.
✗ "After-hours pickup fee"
Sometimes a real cost, sometimes pure markup. Negotiate scheduled-pickup-only contracts to avoid.
✗ "Compliance management fee"
$50-200/month for documentation that's already legally required.
✗ "Pharmaceutical waste handling"
If your contract doesn't include pharma waste in the base, you're paying $25-100/pickup for something that should be bundled.