| biological research safetybiological safety cabinetsbiological research approvalinstitutional biosafety committee (ibc)bloodborne pathogensuniversal precautionsshipping biological materialsselect agentspolicies and guidelinesreference materialsbiological safety formssafety sites and organizationspractical bsl-2 training | Shipping Biological MaterialsThe U.S. Department of Transportation (US DOT) and the International Air Transport
                                       Association (IATA) requires you be trained and certified before shipping biological
                                       and bio-hazardous materials. Even if someone else handles your shipment for you, you
                                       are responsible for packaging and labeling biological materials correctly, and providing
                                       the required documentation. Fines for non-compliance and potential legal action can
                                       occur if you are found to have willfully ignored hazardous materials shipping regulations. Materials Regulated by DOT/IATAThe following materials are regulated by DOT/IATA and require special packaging, labeling,
                                       and documentation. In addition, you must complete a Material Transfer Agreement (MTA) to ship materials off campus, and ensure any required permits to import, export,
                                       or transfer materials have been obtained. Category A Infectious Substances
                                       
                                       An infectious substance which is transported in a form that, when exposure to the
                                          material occurs, is capable of causing permanent disability, life-threatening or fatal
                                          disease in otherwise health humans or animals. A diagnostic specimen that is suspected of containing a Category A Infectious Substance.A patient specimen that is suspected of containing a Category A Infectious Substance.  Category A Substances Affecting Humans
                                       
                                       Bacillus anthracis (cultures only)Brucella abortus (cultures only)Brucella melitensis (cultures only)Brucella suis (cultures only)Burkholderia mallei - Pseudomonas mallei - Glanders (cultures only)Burkholderia pseudomalli -Pseudomonas pseudomallei (cultures only)Chlamydia psittaci - avian strains (cultures only)Clostridium botulinum (cultures only)Coccidioides immitis (cultures only)Coxiella burnetii (cultures only)Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virusDengue virus (cultures only)Eastern equine encephalitis virus (cultures only)Escherichia coli, verotoxigenic (cultures only)Ebola virusFlexal virusFrancisella tularensis (cultures only)Guanarito virusHantaan virusHantaviruses causing hantavirus pulmonary syndromeHendra virusHepatitis B virus (cultures only)Herpes B virus (cultures only)Human immunodeficiency virus (cultures only)Highly pathogenic avian influenza virus (cultures only)Japanese Encephalitis virus (cultures only)Junin virusKyasanur Forest disease virusLassa virusMachupo virusMarburg virusMonkeypox virusMycobacterium tuberculosis (cultures only)Nipah virusOmsk hemorrhagic fever virusPoliovirus (cultures only)Rabies virusRickettsia prowazekii (cultures only)Rickettsia rickettsii (cultures only)Rift Valley fever virusRussian spring-summer encephalitis virus (cultures only)Sabia virusShigella dyseteriae type 1 (cultures only)Tick-borne encephalitis virus (cultures only)Variola virusVenezuelan equine encephalitis virusWest Nile virus (cultures only)Yellow fever virus (cultures only) Category A Substances Affecting Humans
                                       
                                       African swine fever virus culturesAvian paramyxovirus type 1—Velogenic Newcastle disease virus culturesClassical swine fever virus culturesFoot and mouth disease virus culturesLumpy skin disease virus culturesMycoplasma mycoides—Contagious bovine pleuropneumonia culturesPeste des petits ruminants virus culturesRinderpest virus culturesSheep-pox virus culturesGoatpox virus culturesSwine vesicular disease virus cultures Category B Infectious Substances
                                       
                                       Category B infectious substances are those infectious substances which do not meet
                                          the criteria for inclusion in Category A. A diagnostic specimen that is suspected of containing Category B Infectious substances. A patient specimen that is suspected of containing Category B Infectious substances.  Genetically Modified Organisms
                                       
                                       Organisms and micro-organisms in which genetic material has been purposefully altered
                                          through genetic engineering in a way that does not occur naturally and which are capable
                                          of altering animals, plants, or microbiological substances in such a way which is
                                          not normally the result of natural replication or reproduction.  Dry Ice
                                       
                                       The shipment of ANY biological materials on dry ice is regulatedIt is illegal to ship regulated biological material without proper training due to
                                          the ever-changing regulations and heavy documentation that must accompany each shipment.
                                           Training is also required when dry ice is used as refrigerant.  Materials Not Regulated by DOT/IATAThe following are not regulated for shipping by IATA/DOT unless they are packaged
                                       with another material that is regulated (e.g. dry ice); however, you must still complete
                                       a Material Transfer Agreement (MTA) to ship materials off campus. Materials Exempt from IATA/DOT Regulations
                                       
                                       Patient specimens with minimal likelihood that pathogens are present.
                                          
                                          
                                             
                                             Patient specimens are defined as those collected directly from humans or animals,
                                                including, but not limited to: excreta, secreta, blood and its components, tissue
                                                and tissue fluid swabs, and body parts being transported for purposes such as research,
                                                diagnosis, investigational activities, disease treatment and prevention.In determining whether a patient specimen has a minimal likelihood that pathogens
                                                are present, an element of professional judgment is required to determine if a substance
                                                is exempt. That judgment should be based on the known medical history, symptoms and
                                                individual circumstances of the source, human or animal, and endemic local conditions.Examples of specimens that can be transported as patient specimens:
                                                
                                                
                                                   
                                                   Blood or urine tests to monitor cholesterol levels, blood glucose levels, hormone
                                                      levels, or prostate specific antigens.Tests required to monitor organ function such as heart, liver or kidney function for
                                                      humans or animals with non-infectious diseases, or therapeutic drug monitoring.Tests conducted for insurance or employment purposes and are intended to determine
                                                      the presence of drugs or alcoholPregnancy testsBiopsies to detect cancerAntibody detectionNOTE - Patient specimen packaging must be labeled either "Exempt human specimens"
                                                   or "Exempt animal specimens".Substances that do not contain infectious substances or substances which are unlikely
                                          to cause disease in humans and/or animals. Substances in a form that any present pathogens have been neutralized or inactivated
                                          such that they no longer pose a health risk.Substances containing microorganisms, which are non-pathogenic to humans and/or animals.Dried blood spots collected by applying a drop of blood onto absorbent material, or
                                          fecal occult blood screening tests and blood or blood components, which have been
                                          collected for transfusion.Tissue or organs intended for transplantation.Environmental samples (including food, water, and soil samples), which are not considered
                                          to pose a significant risk of infection.  Additional InformationFor assistance in shipping biological materials, please contact Dr. Sarah Keeton at
                                       sorlik1@lsu.edu. Training may be required and can be found online in EHS-Assistant.  |