Tropical Laboratory Safety Including Biosafety
A special issue of Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease (ISSN 2414-6366).
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 June 2018) | Viewed by 31820
Special Issue Editors
2. Mahidol Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit (MORU), Bangkok, Thailand
Interests: scrub typhus; rickettsia; zoonoses; diagnostics; biosafety
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
The frequent outbreaks of emerging and re-emerging diseases in recent years have raised concerns over the preparedness of the animal-health and human-health communities in responding to outbreaks of novel infectious diseases. The biosafety and biocontainment in laboratories, required to handle infectious agents, is presently well recognized as a necessary infrastructure in infectious diseases preparedness and response.
The requirement for biosafety and biocontainment infrastructure in microbiology laboratories and animal facilities to appropriately and safely handle pathogens is a fundamental of providing a safe workplace and external environment. These issues are magnified in the tropics and in other low-resource environments laboratories where capacity to implement a safe working environment with a relation to infectious materials and chemicals is often limited by a lack of knowledgeable staff, poor safety culture and reduced access to financial resources.
Furthermore, the need for hospitals laboratories and allied diagnostic facilities to meet minimum biosafety requirements of the International Health Regulations as well as national biosafety and biosecurity regulations and legislation presents a constant challenge to laboratories in low resource and tropical regions. Often, this is compounded by issues relating to a lack of sustainability of biocontainment laboratory design and construction, as well as the financial and technical needs relating to ongoing laboratory maintenance requirements.
The development of regional biosafety resources and provision of the biosafety cabinet services, equipment and supplies related to biosafety management, trainings and technical assistance on biosafety-related issues also presents an ongoing challenge to laboratory management, national governments and international donor organisations
Specific issues that may be suitable in this Special Issue may include, but are not limited, to
- Low-resource laboratory safety including biosafety and chemical safety
- Renewable and low energy laboratory design including sustainable aspects of construction and maintenance
- Biosafety and biocontainment levels and their relevance in tropical and low resource environments
- Issues relating to primary and secondary biological containment including biological safety cabinets
- Suitability of Personal Protective Equipment in the tropics and in other low-resource environments
- Decontamination and disinfection in the tropics and in other low-resource environments
- Biosafety and Biosecurity regulations and legislation
We look forward to your provocative contributions on this interesting and important topic.
Prof. Stuart Blacksell
Guest Editor
Mr. Allan Bennett
Co-Guest Editor
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Keywords
- Biosafety
- Biorisk
- Biosafety training
- Low-resource laboratory safety
- Chemical safety
- Low-energy laboratory design
- Sustainable laboratories and maintenance
- Biosafety levels
- Biocontainment
- Tropical laboratory safety
- Biological safety cabinet
- Emerging pandemic threats
- Personal protective equipment
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