Man, have I mentioned the new cleaning protocol for the biosafety hoods at work? Basically, we need a sterile environment in which to prepare injected medications, because apparently people don't like dying from infections having a good time in their blood stream. Yeah, who'd have guessed, right? Anyway, so that's pretty sensible and I'm on board with it.
The old cleaning protocol made sense, too; go over the entire interior surface with a prepared wipe (who the hell knows what the chemical mix they use was, since it was 98% "other ingredients" and the remaining 2% were each about 2 lines long) that clears the surface and probably kills most things on it (given that it was covered in warnings saying "Do not touch with skin") and then go over the whole thing a second time with alcohol to sterilize it and clear up any reside left by the previous step. So that's fine, takes maybe 5 minutes to do at the beginning of your shift.
The new version has us spray the entire interior down with a chemical so corrosive that we have to wear a face shield (in case of splashes) and goggles (to keep the fumes out of our eyes) while we're doing it. This chemical then needs to sit for 10 minutes, during which the best thing you can do is just leave so you don't have to keep breathing it. Leaving aside, for the moment, my misgivings about the effectiveness of the paper masks we wear to keep our breath from contaminating anything as protection for our lungs from whatever this is, the major problem is that this makes the entire hood unavailable for at least 15, probably 20 minutes (because there are other steps, too, and god help you if it's the 1st or the 15th, you get to spray it down with an additional fungicide). That means that if somebody needs something made fast during that time, they get to go fuck themselves, because the one thing worse than getting an infection from one of our drugs would be getting some of the chemicals we use to prevent infections.
And what's more, this isn't solving a problem that existed. As far as every pharmacist I've talked to knows, infections from a contaminated pharmacy drug around here are so rare that they basically don't happen. This is, as far as I can tell, a supervisor's way of justifying their paycheck by "updating" policy, and spending absurd amounts of money doing it (because this shit isn't cheap, you know).