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A planning framework for facilities where formalin and formaldehyde-preserved specimens are handled — autopsy suites, grossing rooms, and gross anatomy labs. Built around the structure of OSHA's formaldehyde standard, 29 CFR 1910.1048.
← Back to Resource Center| Benchmark | Level (29 CFR 1910.1048) | What It Triggers |
|---|---|---|
| Action Level | 0.5 ppm (8-hr TWA) | Periodic monitoring and medical surveillance elements |
| PEL (8-hr TWA) | 0.75 ppm | Must not be exceeded; drives engineering controls |
| STEL (15-min) | 2 ppm | Short-term ceiling for peak tasks like fluid transfer |
The standard's hierarchy puts engineering controls ahead of PPE. Equipment with built-in capture — downdraft grossing surfaces, vented covered tables, and sealed-lid immersion tanks — reduces the exposure your program must otherwise manage administratively. That's the practical reason institutions specify them.
Ventilation Planning ChecklistDrainage / Wastewater ChecklistDowndraft Grossing StationPrefilled Formalin Containers
No single purchase does. Compliance is a program — monitoring, controls, training, PPE, surveillance, and records. Ventilated equipment is the engineering-control piece that makes the rest of the program achievable.
They eliminate in-house decanting for routine specimens, which is one of the highest short-term exposure tasks. Many labs adopt prefilled containers specifically to manage STEL peaks.
A qualified industrial hygienist or your institutional EH&S office. Monitoring must represent actual tasks and job classifications, and results drive everything else in the program.
Engineering controls, built in.
USPE downdraft grossing stations, vented tables, and sealed immersion tanks help your program start from a stronger baseline.
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