Cardboard Safety Box
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A Cardboard Safety Box is a puncture-resistant sharps container used to collect and seal used needles, syringes, blades, and other infectious sharps. Supplied flat and easy to assemble, it features a one-way drop opening and clear fill line to reduce needle-stick risk and prevent overfilling. Ideal for hospitals, clinics, vaccination programs, and field camps, it offers a lightweight, cost-effective solution for safe biomedical waste disposal.
Description
A Cardboard Safety Box is a single-use sharps disposal container made from rigid, puncture-resistant corrugated board. It is designed to collect used syringes, needles, blades, lancets, and other contaminated sharps right at the point of care. After assembly, the box provides a stable, clearly marked biohazard container with a one-way drop opening that reduces hand contact with sharps and helps prevent needle-stick injuries.
Key features and benefits:
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Puncture-resistant multi-ply cardboard that safely contains sharps during use and transport.
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Wide top opening with a dedicated sharps aperture for easy, controlled insertion of needles and syringe assemblies.
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Clear fill line and locking lid to avoid overfilling and to seal the box before final disposal.
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Flat-pack supply for low storage volume, fast on-site assembly, and easy distribution in bulk programs.
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Lightweight, cost-effective build suitable for high-volume settings and outreach work.
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Designed for safe final disposal including high-temperature methods such as incineration.
Cardboard safety boxes are widely used in hospitals, maternity wards, clinics, laboratories, vaccination drives, and field or emergency health camps. They’re especially valuable where large numbers of injections are given and safe segregation of biomedical sharps is required.
Compared with reusable or plastic sharps containers, cardboard safety boxes are cheaper, easier to transport in quantity, and ideal for single-campaign or short-term use. Plastic containers may be preferred for long-term stations, but cardboard boxes remain the practical standard for routine immunization and mobile healthcare teams.
