Team:EPF-Lausanne/Safety

From 2011.igem.org

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(Interview with Dr. Stéphane Karlen, Biosafety Coordinator at the EPFL)
(Interview with Dr. Stéphane Karlen, Biosafety Coordinator at the EPFL)
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'''Is there any biosafety training available at the EPFL and is it a requirement for working in a lab?'''
'''Is there any biosafety training available at the EPFL and is it a requirement for working in a lab?'''
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There is a monthly biosafety course that brings out a good number of bachelors, masters, and doctoral students. However, it has not been made a mandatory requirement for working in a lab. That being said, we divide all the labs at the EPFL into four categories of risk. Level 1 represents the lowest level of risk, meaning that no healthy average human can be harmed in this lab and only a very specific set of individuals with special conditions can be injured (a specific allergy for example). And then there's Level 4 that represents an extremely high level of risk (working on the Ebola virus for example). The EPFL mostly has level 1 and level 2 labs. Anything involving normal E. coli is a level 1 biosafety risk. To give you some idea, you run the same risks of infection in a Level 1 workplace as you do in your own kitchen or at a pharmacy.
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'''Does Switzerland impose any particular laws on biosafety?'''
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There are two main federal laws that govern most biosafety regulations at the local level. One is "La Loi sur les Zoonoses" which translates as "The Law on Animal Infection" and the other is "La Loi sur le génie génétique" which translates as "The Law of Genetic Engineering". At the more local level, two ordinances play a major rule in sculpting our own protocols: one is the "Ordonnance sur l'utilisation confinée" (OUC) which defines the boundaries for genetic work, and the second is the "Ordonnance sur la protection des travailleurs, collaborateurs exposés contre les risques liés aux microorganismes" (OUM). The latter is more directly relevant to the work done at the EPFL. Finally, there is a local directive -- which does not have the force of law -- that tells us how to run our risk analysis for the labs at the EPFL. 
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Revision as of 09:46, 30 August 2011