Team:UNSW Australia/Safety

Safe Working Practices

General

Before any lab work started, our team members were inducted into the lab, ensuring everyone knows where the lab's safety features are, such as the eyewash and safety shower, fire blanket, fire extinguisher and spill cleanup kit. Team members were also trained on equipment and read the relevant Safe Work Procedure (SWP) and Risk Management Form (RMF) before using it. This simple act of training our team members before starting work was arguably the greatest reduction in risk as it means we could conduct ourselves in a safe way, having knowledge of the risks involved in all procedures we conducted. Our use of Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) such as a lab coat, safety goggles, gloves (when appropriate), long pants, leather-topped shoes and hair tied back was also a great advantage in risk reduction, and of course, we never forgot to wash our hands before leaving the lab!

Our environment conscious lab team was also trained in the proper disposal of chemical waste, separating it from our general bio-waste in a separate waste cube and autoclaving or chemically disinfecting our biological waste before disposal. Our flammables and corrosives were kept in their own respective storage cabinets and everything in the lab was fully labelled, making sure all associated hazards were highlighted where relevant. We were also trained on what to do in the case of a spill, including the use of the spill kit.

Salkowski Assay

The Salkowski assay is the method of choice for quantifying indole-3-acetic acid production, one of the pathways chosen to test our scaffold. This method involves the use of a strong acid, and hence a team dedicated to the assay was thoroughly trained in the risks involved and how to minimise them, including what to do in the case of a spill.

OGTR

To ensure the highest level of safety for our team, we followed the guidelines set out by the OGTR.