Team:KULeuven/Safety
From 2009.igem.org
(New page: When we were doing research on our project, we weren’t only thinking about the risks of the exact project we’re making, but also the different applications one could think of. Of cours...)
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Revision as of 15:35, 12 October 2009
When we were doing research on our project, we weren’t only thinking about the risks of the exact project we’re making, but also the different applications one could think of. Of course vanillin is a harmless product, but if one was to use our regulatory system for something more hazardous, a real risk could occur. Luckily, the devices we tried to make this summer did not impose a risk for the students.
Of course biotechnological lab work always implicates a risk at some extend. The bacteria we work with can always prove to be opportunistic and not completely harmless. In the lab we worked in, the CMPG lab of K.U.Leuven, researchers are also working with Salmonella which is known to illicit abdominal pain. Even certain strains of E. coli can induce gastrointestinal infections when the host has a weak immune system. When working with E. coli we were obviously always careful to work in a sterile environment, making sure the risk of an infection was very small.
All students were consistent in wearing their lab coats, when working, gloves were always worn when working with carcinogens or toxic products. Some of the students attended a seminar on Lab-safety, to learn how to minimize the risks of working in a scientific lab.
Not only the health of the researchers is important, the environment should not feel an impact. We were careful to always put the biological waste in a bio hazardous-bin, so waste-management could properly dispose of our biological products.