Team:BYU Provo/Safety

From 2013.igem.org

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Brigham Young University has set protocols aimed at ensuring student safety in the laboratory. Students are required to wear long pants and close-toed, waterproof shoes and follow safety precautions for working with chemicals and biological agents (protective clothing including gloves, etc.). They are prohibited from eating in laboratory rooms. The labs are kept locked when not in use and are subjected to random inspections to ensure that safety procedures are followed.
Brigham Young University has set protocols aimed at ensuring student safety in the laboratory. Students are required to wear long pants and close-toed, waterproof shoes and follow safety precautions for working with chemicals and biological agents (protective clothing including gloves, etc.). They are prohibited from eating in laboratory rooms. The labs are kept locked when not in use and are subjected to random inspections to ensure that safety procedures are followed.
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All biological agents we are working with are BSL1 (E. coli and various phages) or BSL2 (''Vibrio cholera'', ATCC 14035). Dr. Julianne Grose, our instructor, has received BYU approval to work with BSL-2 reagents. Our laboratory room has also been approved for BSL-2 lab work. We have followed current safety measures for disposing of biological samples in biohazard waste as well as cleaning glassware and desktops with bleach and/or ethanol.
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All BioBrick parts created and used are non-hazardous and have been contained to the lab.
The Institutional Biosafety Committee (IBC) at Brigham Young University supervises the use of recombinant DNA and handles other biological safety and hazard issues in experiments. Such use might involve constructing and handling DNA molecules in organisms. The IBC must review and approve all proposed experiments in advance of actual work. The link to there website is found [http://orca.byu.edu/ibc/ here]. We have submitted the necessary forms to our IBC and have received approval for our work.
The Institutional Biosafety Committee (IBC) at Brigham Young University supervises the use of recombinant DNA and handles other biological safety and hazard issues in experiments. Such use might involve constructing and handling DNA molecules in organisms. The IBC must review and approve all proposed experiments in advance of actual work. The link to there website is found [http://orca.byu.edu/ibc/ here]. We have submitted the necessary forms to our IBC and have received approval for our work.

Revision as of 05:34, 25 September 2013


Safety


Approval
Overview
Safety Form

Approval

Safety forms were approved on 9/20/13 by David Lloyd and Julie McNamara.

Overview

<to be deleted>Use this page to answer the questions on the safety page.

Brigham Young University has set protocols aimed at ensuring student safety in the laboratory. Students are required to wear long pants and close-toed, waterproof shoes and follow safety precautions for working with chemicals and biological agents (protective clothing including gloves, etc.). They are prohibited from eating in laboratory rooms. The labs are kept locked when not in use and are subjected to random inspections to ensure that safety procedures are followed.

All biological agents we are working with are BSL1 (E. coli and various phages) or BSL2 (Vibrio cholera, ATCC 14035). Dr. Julianne Grose, our instructor, has received BYU approval to work with BSL-2 reagents. Our laboratory room has also been approved for BSL-2 lab work. We have followed current safety measures for disposing of biological samples in biohazard waste as well as cleaning glassware and desktops with bleach and/or ethanol.

All BioBrick parts created and used are non-hazardous and have been contained to the lab.

The Institutional Biosafety Committee (IBC) at Brigham Young University supervises the use of recombinant DNA and handles other biological safety and hazard issues in experiments. Such use might involve constructing and handling DNA molecules in organisms. The IBC must review and approve all proposed experiments in advance of actual work. The link to there website is found [http://orca.byu.edu/ibc/ here]. We have submitted the necessary forms to our IBC and have received approval for our work.

Safety Form

BYU Safety Form 1.pdf

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