TEWKSBURY
BOARD OF HEALTH
RULES AND
REGULATIONS FOR BODY ART ESTABLISHMENTS
AND
PRACTITIONERS
1.0. Purpose
1.1. The Tewksbury Board of
Health is responsible for the protection of the public and environmental health
and welfare within the Town of Tewksbury. The Board finds the need to regulate
the performance of body piercing, tattooing, and other body art since all are
invasive procedures to the body. Inappropriate sanitary conditions may cause
infection and infectious diseases including, but not limited to, Hepatitis B,
Hepatitis C, and Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV/AIDS). The Board intends
that only practitioners and establishments that meet and maintain minimum
standards of sanitation and education may provide body art services to the
public.
2.0. Authority
2.1. These regulations are
adopted under the authority of M.G.L.c. 111, § 31.
3.0. Applicability
3.1. These Regulations shall
apply to all persons and businesses engaging in the act of body piercing,
tattooing, and otherwise providing artistic accents to body parts.
4.0. Citation
4.1. These regulations may be
cited as “Body Art Regulations”.
5.0. Definitions
Aftercare means written instructions given to the client, specific to the body
art procedure(s) rendered, about caring for the body art and surrounding area,
including information about when to seek medical treatment, if necessary.
Antibacterial
Solution shall
mean any solution used to retard or prevent the growth of bacteria for
application to human skin and is so labeled.
Applicant means any person who
applies to the Board of Health for either a body art establishment permit or
practitioner permit.
Autoclave means an apparatus for
sterilization utilizing steam pressure at a specific temperature over a period
of time.
Autoclaving means a process which
results in the destruction of all forms of microbial life, including highly
resistant spores, by the use of an autoclave for a minimum of thirty minutes at
20 pounds of pressure (PSI) at a temperature of 270 degrees Fahrenheit.
Bloodborne
Pathogens Standard means OSHA Guidelines contained in 29 CFR 1910.1030, entitled
"Occupational Exposure to Bloodborne Pathogens.”
Board shall mean the Tewksbury
Board of Health.
Body Art means the practice of
physical body adornment by permitted establishments and practitioners using,
but not limited to, the following techniques: body piercing, tattooing,
cosmetic tattooing, branding, and scarification. This definition does not
include practices that are considered medical procedures by the Board of
Registration in Medicine, such as implants under the skin, which procedures are
prohibited.
Body Art
Establishment or Establishment means a location, place, or business that has been
granted a permit by the Board, whether public or private, where the practices
of body art are performed, whether or not for profit.
Body Art
Intern means
a specifically identified individual who has been granted a permit by the Board
to study and perform body art in an establishment under the supervision of a
Body Art Practitioner that has been granted a permit by the Board.
Body Art
Practitioner or Practitioner means a specifically identified individual who has
been granted a permit by the Board to perform body art in an establishment that
has been granted a permit by the Board.
Body Piercer shall mean any person
engaging in the activity of Body Piercing.
Body Piercing shall mean any method of
inserting a needle or body piercing instrument into the body to place jewelry or
other adornment in the perforation produced by the needle or body piercing
instrument, or any use of an ear piercing gun.
Braiding means the cutting of strips
of skin of a person, which strips are then to be intertwined with one another
and placed onto such person so as to cause or allow the incised and interwoven
strips of skin to heal in such intertwined condition.
Branding means inducing a pattern of
scar tissue by use of a heated material (usually metal) to the skin, making a
serious burn, which eventually becomes a scar.
Cleaning area means the area in a Body Art
Establishment used in the sterilization, sanitation or other cleaning of
instruments or other equipment used for the practice of body art.
Client means a member of the
public who requests a body art procedure at a body art establishment.
Contaminated
Waste means
waste as defined in 105 CMR 480.000: Storage and Disposal of Infectious or
Physically Dangerous Medical or Biological Waste, State Sanitary Code, Chapter
VIII and/or 29 Code of Federal Regulation part 1910.1030. This includes any
liquid or semi-liquid blood or other potentially infectious material;
contaminated items that would release blood or other potentially infectious
material in a liquid or semi-liquid state if compressed; items on which there
is dried blood or other potentially infectious material and which are capable
of releasing these materials during handling; sharps and any wastes containing
blood or other potentially infectious materials.
Cosmetic
Tattooing,
also known as permanent cosmetics, micro pigment implantation or dermal
pigmentation, means the implantation of permanent pigment around the eyes, lips
and cheeks of the face and hair imitation.
Disinfectant means a product registered
as a disinfectant by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
Disinfection means the destruction of
disease-causing microorganisms on inanimate objects or surfaces, thereby
rendering these objects safe for use or handling.
Ear piercing means the puncturing of the
lobe of the ear with a presterilized single-use stud-and-clasp ear piercing
system following the manufacturer's instructions.
Equipment means all machinery,
including fixtures, containers, vessels, tools, devices, implements, furniture,
display and storage areas, sinks, and all other apparatus and appurtenances
used in connection with the operation of a body art establishment.
Exposure means an event whereby
there is an eye, mouth or other mucus membrane, non-intact skin or parental
contact with the blood or bodily fluids of another person or contact of an eye,
mouth or other mucous membrane, non-intact skin or parenteral contact with
other potentially infectious matter.
Germicidal
Solution
shall mean any solution that destroys germs and is so labeled.
Hand Sink means a lavatory equipped
with hot and cold running water under pressure, used solely for washing hands,
arms, or other portions of the body.
Hot water means water that attains and
maintains a temperature 110º-130ºF.
Instruments
Used for Body Art means hand pieces, needles, needle bars, and other instruments that may
come in contact with a client's body or may be exposed to bodily fluids during
any body art procedure.
Invasive means entry into the
client’s body either by incision or insertion of any instruments into or
through the skin or mucosa, or by any other means intended to puncture, break,
or otherwise compromise the skin or mucosa.
Jewelry means any ornament inserted
into a newly pierced area, which must be made of surgical implant‑grade
stainless steel; solid 14k or 18k white or yellow gold, niobium, titanium, or
platinum; or a dense, low‑porosity plastic, which is free of nicks,
scratches, or irregular surfaces and has been properly sterilized prior to use.
Light colored means a light reflectance
value of 70 percent or greater.
Minor shall mean any person under
the age of eighteen (18) years.
Mobile Body
Art Establishment means any trailer, truck, car, van, camper or
other motorized or non-motorized vehicle, a shed, tent, movable structure, or
other facility, or concert, fair, party or other event where one conduct body
art procedures.
Operator means any person who
individually or jointly or severally with others, owns, or controls an
establishment, but is not a body art practitioner.
Permit means Board approval in
writing to either (1) operate a body art establishment, or (2) operate as a
body art practitioner within a body art establishment, or operate as a Body Art
Intern within a body art establishment. Board approval shall be granted solely
for the practice of body art pursuant to these regulations. Said permit is
exclusive of the establishment’s compliance with other licensing or permitting
requirements that may exist within the Board’s jurisdiction.
Person shall mean any individual,
partnership, corporation, or other business entity.
Physician means an individual licensed as a qualified physician by the Board of Registration in Medicine pursuant to M.G.L. c. 112 § 2.
Piercing
Studio
shall mean any room or space where body piercing is practiced or where the
business of body piercing is conducted or any part thereof.
Procedure
surface means
any surface of an inanimate object that contacts the client's unclothed body
during a body art procedure, skin preparation of the area adjacent to and
including the body art procedure, or any associated work area which may require
sanitizing.
Sanitary shall mean clean and free
of agents of infection or disease.
Sanitize means the application of a
U.S. EPA registered sanitizer on a cleaned surface in accordance with the label
instructions.
Scarification means altering skin texture
by cutting the skin and controlling the body’s healing process in order to
produce wounds, which result in permanently raised wheals or bumps known as
keloids.
School of Body
Art Practitioners means any person or establishment offering a curriculum where tattooing,
body piercing, or other forms of body art are taught, whether or not a fee is
paid.
Sharps means any object, sterile or
contaminated, that may intentionally or accidentally cut or penetrate the skin
or mucosa, including, but not limited to, needle devices, lancets, scalpel
blades, razor blades, and broken glass.
Sharps
Container means
a puncture-resistant, leak-proof container that can be closed for handling,
storage, transportation, and disposal and that is labeled with the
International Biohazard Symbol.
Single Use
Items means
products or items that are intended for one-time, one-person use and are
disposed of after use on each client, including, but not limited to, cotton
swabs or balls, tissues or paper products, paper or plastic cups, gauze and sanitary
coverings, razors, piercing needles, scalpel blades, stencils, ink cups, and
protective gloves.
Sterilize means the use of a physical
or chemical procedure to destroy all microbial life including highly resistant
bacterial endospores.
Tattoo means the indelible mark,
figure or decorative design introduced by insertion of dyes or pigments into or
under the subcutaneous portion of the skin.
Tattooing means any method of placing
ink or other pigment into or under the skin or mucosa by the aid of needles or
any other instrument used to puncture the skin, resulting in permanent
coloration of the skin or mucosa. This term includes all forms of cosmetic
tattooing.
Temporary Body
Art Establishment means the same as Mobile Body Art Establishment.
Three dimensional “3D” Body Art or
Beading or Implantation means the form of body art consisting of or
requiring the placement, injection or insertion of an object, device or other
thing made of matters such as steel, titanium, rubber, latex, plastic, glass or
other inert materials, beneath the surface of the skin of a person. This term does not include Body Piercing.
Ultrasonic
Cleaning Unit means
a unit approved by the Board, physically large enough to fully submerge
instruments in liquid, which removes all foreign matter from the instruments by
means of high frequency oscillations transmitted through the contained liquid.
Universal Precautions means a set of guidelines and controls, published by
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), as "Guidelines for
Prevention of Transmission of Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) and Hepatitis
B Virus (HBV) to Health‑Care and Public‑Safety Workers" in
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report) (MMWR), June 23, 1989, Vo1.38 No. S‑6,
and as "Recommendations for Preventing Transmission of Human
Immunodeficiency Virus and Hepatitis B Virus to Patients During Exposure‑Prone
Invasive Procedures" in MMWR, July 12,1991, Vo1.40, No. RR‑8. This
method of infection control requires the employer and the employee to assume
that all human blood and specified human body fluids are infectious for HIV,
HBV, and other blood pathogens. Precautions include hand washing; gloving;
personal protective equipment; injury prevention; and proper handling and
disposal of needles, other sharp instruments, and blood and body fluid‑contaminated
products.
6.0. General
6.1. These regulations shall take effect upon publication of a notice of their adoption in a local newspaper.
6.2. The adoption of these regulations replaces and rescinds the Board of Health Rules and Regulations for Body Piercing and Rules and Regulations for Body Art Establishments.
6.3. Any Body Art Practitioner licensed under the previous Rules and Regulations for Body Piercing and Body Art Establishments shall be subject to the training requirements in effect at that time.
7.0.
Exemptions
7.1.
Physicians licensed in accordance with M.G.L.c. 112, § 2 who perform body art
procedures as part of patient treatment are exempt from these regulations.
7.2. There shall be no exemption for individuals who pierce only the lobe of the ear with a presterilized single‑use stud‑and‑clasp ear‑piercing system.
7.3. Veterinarians licensed in accordance with M.G.L.c. 112, § 54 who perform body art procedures on animals only as part of patient treatment are exempt from these regulations.
8.0. Restrictions
8.1. No tattooing, piercing of genitalia, branding or scarification shall be performed on a person under the age of 18.
8.2. Body piercing, other
than piercing the genitalia, may be performed on a person under the age of 18
provided that the person is accompanied by a properly identified parent, legal
custodial parent or legal guardian who has signed a form consenting to such
procedure. Properly identified shall mean a valid photo identification of the
adult, documentation concerning the legal status of the adult as parent or
guardian, and a birth certificate of the minor.
8.3.
No body art shall be performed upon an animal.
8.4. The following practices
are prohibited unless performed by a medical doctor licensed by the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts: tongue splitting; braiding; three dimensional
augmentation; beading; filing, fracturing, removal, or tattooing of teeth;
cartilage modification (not including the piercing of the nose or ear);
amputation; genital modification; introduction of saline or other liquids,
except for ink or dye used for tattooing.
9.0. Operation of Body Art
Establishments
Unless
otherwise ordered or approved by the Board, each body art establishment shall
be constructed, operated and maintained to meet the following minimum
requirements:
9.1.
Physical Plant
9.1.1. Walls, floors,
ceilings, and procedure surfaces shall be smooth, durable, free of open holes
or cracks, light‑colored, washable, and in good repair. Walls, floors,
and ceilings shall be maintained in a clean condition. All procedure surfaces,
including client chairs/benches, shall be of such construction as to be easily
cleaned and sanitized after each client.
9.1.2. Solid partitions or
walls extending from floor to ceiling shall separate the establishment’s space
from any other room used for human habitation, any food establishment or room
where food is prepared, any hair salon, any retail sales, or any other such
activity that may cause potential contamination of work surfaces.
9.1.3. The establishment
shall take all measures necessary to ensure against the presence or breeding of
insects, vermin, and rodents within the establishment.
9.1.4. Each practitioner area shall have a minimum of 45 square
feet of floor space for each practitioner.
Each establishment shall have an area that may be screened from public
view for clients requesting privacy.
Multiple body art stations shall be separated by a dividers or partition
at a minimum.
9.1.5. The establishment
shall be well ventilated and provided with an artificial light source
equivalent to at least 20 foot candles 3 feet off the floor, except that at
least 100 foot candles shall be provided at the level where the body art
procedure is being performed, where instruments and sharps are assembled and
all cleaning areas.
9.1.6. All electrical
outlets in practitioner areas and cleaning areas shall be equipped with
approved ground fault (GFCI) protected receptacles.
9.1.7. A separate, readily
accessible hand sink with hot and cold running water under pressure, preferably
equipped with wrist‑ or foot‑operated controls and supplied with
liquid soap, and disposable paper towels stored in fixed dispensers shall be
readily accessible within the establishment.
Each practitioner area shall have a hand sink.
9.1.8. There shall be a
sharps container in each practitioner area and each cleaning area.
9.1.9. There shall be a
minimum of one toilet room containing a toilet and sink. The toilet room shall
be provided with toilet paper, liquid hand soap and paper towels stored in a
fixed dispenser. A body art
establishment permanently located within a retail shopping center, or similar
setting housing multiple operations within one enclosed structure having shared
entrance and exit points, shall not be required to provide a separate toilet
room within such body art establishment if Board-approved toilet facilities are
located in the retail shopping center within 300 feet of the body art
establishment so as to be readily accessible to any client or practitioner.
9.1.10. The public water
supply entering a body art establishment shall be protected by a testable,
reduced pressure back flow preventor installed in accordance with 142 CMR 248.000,
as amended from time to time.
9.1.11. At least one
covered, foot operated waste receptacle shall be provided in each operator area
and each toilet room. Receptacles in
the operator area shall be emptied daily.
Solid waste shall be stored in covered, leak-proof, rodent-resistant
containers and shall be removed from the premises at least weekly.
9.1.12. At least one
janitorial sink shall be provided in each body art establishment for use in
cleaning the establishment and proper disposal of non-contaminated liquid
wastes in accordance with all applicable Federal, state and local laws. Said sink shall be of adequate size equipped
with hot and cold running water under pressure and permit the cleaning of the
establishment and any equipment used for cleaning.
9.1.13. All instruments and
supplies shall be stored in clean, dry, and covered containers. Containers
shall be kept in a secure area specifically dedicated to the storage of all
instruments and supplies.
9.1.14. The establishment
shall have a cleaning area. Every cleaning area shall have an area for the
placement of an autoclave or other sterilization unit located or positioned a
minimum of 36 inches from the required ultrasonic cleaning unit.
9.1.15. The establishment
shall have a customer waiting area, exclusive and separate from any
workstation, instrument storage area, cleaning area or any other area in the
body art establishment used for body art activity.
9.1.16. No animals of any
kind shall be allowed in a body art establishment except service animals used
by persons with disabilities (e.g., Seeing Eye dogs). Fish aquariums shall be allowed in waiting rooms and
nonprocedural areas.
9.1.17. Smoking, eating, or
drinking is prohibited in the area where body art is performed, with the
exception of non-alcoholic fluids
being offered to a client during or after a body art procedure.
9.2.
Requirements for Single Use Items
Including Inks, Dyes and Pigments
9.2.1. Single-use items
shall not be used on more than one client for any reason. After use, all
single-use sharps shall be immediately disposed of in approved sharps
containers pursuant to 105 CMR 480.000.
9.2.2. All products applied
to the skin, such as but not limited to body art stencils, applicators, gauze
and razors, shall be single use and disposable.
9.2.3.
Hollow bore needles or needles with cannula shall not be reused.
9.2.4. All inks, dyes,
pigments, solid core needles, and equipment shall be specifically manufactured
for performing body art procedures and shall be used according to
manufacturer's instructions.
9.2.5. Inks, dyes or pigments
may be mixed and may only be diluted with water from an approved potable
source. Immediately before a tattoo is
applied, the quantity of the dye to be used shall be transferred from the dye
bottle and placed into single‑use paper cups or plastic cups. Upon
completion of the tattoo, these single-use cups or caps and their contents
shall be discarded.
9.3.
Sanitation and Sterilization Measures
and Procedures
9.3.1. All non-disposable
instruments used for body art, including all reusable solid core needles, pins
and stylets, shall be cleaned thoroughly after each use by scrubbing with an
appropriate soap or disinfectant solution and hot water, (to remove blood and
tissue residue), and shall be placed in an ultrasonic unit sold for cleaning
purposes under approval of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and operated
in accordance with manufacturer's instructions.
9.3.2. After being cleaned,
all non-disposable instruments used for body art shall be packed individually
in sterilizer packs and subsequently sterilized in a steam autoclave sold for
medical sterilization purposes under approval of the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration. All sterilizer packs shall contain either a sterilizer
indicator or internal temperature indicator. Sterilizer packs must be dated
with an expiration date not to exceed six (6) months.
9.3.3. The autoclave shall
be used, cleaned, and maintained according to manufacturer's instruction. A copy of the manufacturer's recommended
procedures for the operation of the autoclave must be available for inspection
by the Board. Autoclaves shall be
located away from workstations or areas frequented by the public.
9.3.4. Each holder of a
permit to operate a body art establishment shall demonstrate that the autoclave
used is capable of attaining sterilization by monthly spore destruction
tests. These tests shall be verified
through an independent laboratory. The
permit shall not be issued or renewed until documentation of the autoclave’s
ability to destroy spores is received by the Board. These test records shall be retained by the operator for a period
of three (3) years and made available to the Board upon request.
9.3.5. All instruments used
for body art procedures shall remain stored in sterile packages until just
prior to the performance of a body art procedure. After sterilization, the instruments used in body art procedures
shall be stored in a dry, clean cabinet or other tightly covered container
reserved for the storage of such instruments.
9.3.6. Sterile instruments
may not be used if the package has been breached or after the expiration date
without first repackaging and resterilizing.
9.3.7. If the body art
establishment uses only single‑use, disposable instruments and products,
and uses sterile supplies, an autoclave shall not be required.
9.3.8. When assembling
instruments used for body art procedures, the operator shall wear disposable
medical gloves and use medically recognized sterile techniques to ensure that
the instruments and gloves are not contaminated.
9.3.9. Reusable cloth items
shall be mechanically washed with detergent and mechanically dried after each
use. The cloth items shall be stored in
a dry, clean environment until used. Should such items become contaminated
directly or indirectly with bodily fluids, the items shall be washed in
accordance with standards applicable to hospitals and medical care facilities,
at a temperature of 160°F or a temperature of 120°F with the use of chlorine disinfectant.
9.4.
The following shall be prominently
displayed:
9.4.1. A Disclosure Statement, a model of which shall be available from the Board. A Disclosure Statement shall also be given to each client, advising him/her of the risks and possible consequences of body art procedures.
9.4.2. The name, address and phone number of the
Board of Health.
9.4.3. An Emergency Plan, including:
(a)
a
plan for the purpose of contacting police, fire or emergency medical services
in the event of an emergency;
(b)
a
telephone in good working order shall be easily available and accessible to all
employees and clients during all hours of operation; and
(c)
a
sign at or adjacent to the telephone indicating the correct emergency telephone
numbers.
9.4.4.
An occupancy and use permit as issued by the local building official.
9.4.5. A current establishment
permit.
9.4.6. Each practitioner’s
permit.
9.5. The establishment shall maintain the following records in a secure
place for a minimum of three (3) years, and such records shall be made
available to the Board upon request:
9.5.1. Establishment information, which shall
include:
(a) establishment name;
(b) hours of operation;
(c) owner's name and address;
(d) a complete description of all body art procedures performed;
(e) an inventory of all instruments and body jewelry, all sharps, and
all inks used for any and all body art procedures, including names of
manufacturers and serial or lot numbers, if applicable. Invoices or packing
slips shall satisfy this requirement;
(f) A Material Safety
Data Sheet, when available, for each ink and dye used by the establishment;
(g) copies of waste hauler manifests
(h) copies of commercial biological monitoring tests
(i) Exposure Incident Report (kept permanently)
(j) a copy of these regulations.
9.5.2. Employee information, which shall include:
(a) full legal names and exact duties;
(b) date of birth;
(c) home address;
(d) home /work phone numbers; and
(e) identification photograph;
(f)
dates
of employment;
(g)
Hepatitis
B vaccination status or declination notification; and
(h)
training
records
9.5.3.
Client Information, which shall include:
(a) name;
(b) date of birth and valid
photo identification
(c) address of the client;
(d) date of the procedure;
(e) name of the practitioner who performed the procedure(s);
(f) description of procedure(s) performed and the location on the
body;
(g) a signed consent form as specified herein; and,
(h) if the client is a person under the age of 18, proof of parental or
guardian identification, presence and consent including a copy of the
photographic identification of the parent or guardian.
9.5.4. Client information shall be kept confidential
at all times.
9.5.5. Each establishment
shall create, update, and comply with an Exposure Control Plan. The Plan shall be submitted to the Board for
review so as to meet all of the requirements of OSHA regulations, to include,
but not limited to, 29 CFR 1910.1030 OSHA Bloodborne Pathogens Standards et
seq., as amended from time to time. A
copy of the Plan shall be maintained at the Body Art Establishment at all times
and shall be made available to the Board upon request.
9.6.
No person shall establish or operate a Mobile or Temporary Body Art
Establishment.
10.0 Standards of Practice
10.1 A practitioner shall perform all body art procedures in accordance with Universal Precautions set forth by the U.S Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
10.2. A practitioner shall refuse service to any person who may be under the influence of alcohol or drugs.
10.3. Practitioners who use
ear‑piercing systems must conform to the manufacturer’s directions for
use, and to applicable U.S. Food and Drug Administration requirements. No practitioner shall use an ear piercing
system on any part of the client’s body other than the lobe of the ear.
10.4. Prior to performing a body art procedure on a client,
the practitioner shall:
10.4.1. Inform the client, verbally and in writing that the following health conditions may increase health risks associated with receiving a body art procedure:
(a) history of diabetes;
(b) history of hemophilia
(bleeding);
(c) history of skin
diseases, skin lesions, or skin sensitivities to soaps, disinfectants etc;
(d) history of allergies or
adverse reactions to pigments, dyes, or other sensitivities;
(e) history of epilepsy,
seizures, fainting, or narcolepsy;
(f) use of medications such
as anticoagulants, which thin the blood and/or interfere with blood clotting;
and
(g) any other conditions
such as hepatitis or HIV.
10.4.2. Require that the client sign a form confirming that the above information was provided, that the client does not have a condition that prevents them from receiving body art, that the client consents to the performance of the body art procedure and that the client has been given the aftercare instructions as required herein.
10.5. A practitioner shall
maintain the highest degree of personal cleanliness, conform to best standard
hygienic practices, and wear clean clothes when performing body art procedures.
Before performing body art procedures, the practitioner must thoroughly wash their
hands in hot running water with liquid soap, then rinse hands and dry with
disposable paper towels. This shall be
done as often as necessary to remove contaminants.
10.6. In performing body art procedures, a practitioner shall wear disposable single-use gloves. Gloves shall be changed if they become pierced, torn, or otherwise contaminated by contact with any unclean surfaces or objects or by contact with a third person. The gloves shall be discarded, at a minimum, after the completion of each procedure on an individual client, and hands shall be washed in accordance with section 10.5 before the next set of gloves is put on. Under no circumstances shall a single pair of gloves be used on more than one person. The use of disposable single-use gloves does not preclude or substitute for hand washing procedures as part of a good personal hygiene program.
10.7. The skin of the practitioner shall be free of rash or infection. No practitioner affected with boils, infected wounds, open sores, abrasions, weeping dermatological lesions or acute respiratory infection shall work in any area of a body art establishment in any capacity in which there is a likelihood that that person could contaminate body art equipment, supplies, or working surfaces with body substances or pathogenic organisms.
10.8. Any item or instrument
used for body art that is contaminated during the procedure shall be discarded
and replaced immediately with a new disposable item or a new sterilized
instrument or item before the procedure resumes.
10.9. Preparation and care
of a client’s skin area must comply with the following:
10.9.1. Any skin or mucosa surface to receive a body art procedure shall be free of rash or any visible infection.
10.9.2. Before a body art
procedure is performed, the immediate skin area and the areas of skin
surrounding where body art procedure is to be placed shall be washed with soap
and water or an approved surgical skin preparation. If shaving is necessary,
single‑use disposable razors or safety razors with single‑service
blades shall be used. Blades shall be discarded after each use, and reusable
holders shall be cleaned and autoclaved after use. Following shaving, the skin and surrounding area shall be washed
with soap and water. The washing pad
shall be discarded after a single use.
10.9.3. In the event of
bleeding, all products used to stop the bleeding or to absorb blood shall be
single use, and discarded immediately after use in appropriate covered containers,
and disposed of in accordance with 105 CMR 480.000.
10.10. Petroleum jellies,
soaps, and other products used in the application of stencils shall be
dispensed and applied on the area to receive a body art procedure with sterile
gauze or other sterile applicator to prevent contamination of the original
container and its contents. The applicator or gauze shall be used once and then
discarded.
10.11. The practitioner shall provide each client with verbal and written instructions on the aftercare of the body art site. The written instructions shall advise the client:
10.11.1. on the proper cleansing of
the area which received the body art;
10.11.2. to consult a health care provider for:
(a) unexpected redness,
tenderness or swelling at the site of the body art procedure;
(b) any rash;
(c) unexpected drainage at or from the site of the body art procedure; or
(d) a fever within 24 hours
of the body art procedure; and
10.11.3. of the address and phone number of the
establishment.
10.12. Contaminated waste
shall be stored, treated and disposed in accordance with 105 CMR 480.000:
Storage and Disposal of Infectious or Physically Dangerous Medical or
Biological Waster, State Sanitary Code, Chapter VIII.
11.00 Mandatory Reports
11.1. An Exposure Incident Report shall be completed
by the close of the business day during which an exposure has or might have
taken place by the involved or knowledgeable body art practitioner for every
exposure incident occurring in the conduct of any body art activity.
11.2.
Each Exposure Incident Report shall contain:
11.2.1. A copy of the
application and consent form for body art activity completed by any client or
minor client involved in the exposure incident;
11.2.2. A full description
of the exposure incident, including the portion of the body involved therein;
11.2.3. Instrument(s) or other equipment implicated;
11.2.4. A copy of body art practitioner license of
the involved body art practitioner;
11.2.5. Date and time of exposure;
11.2.6. A copy of any
medical history released to the body art establishment or body art
practitioner; and
11.2.7. Information
regarding any recommendation to refer to a physician or waiver to consult a
physician by persons involved.
11.3. A written report of
any injury, infection complication or disease as a result of a body art
procedure, or complaint of injury, infection complication or disease, shall be
forwarded by the operator to the Board which issued the permit, with a copy to
the injured client within five working days of its occurrence or knowledge
thereof.
11.4. Each Report of Injury
or Complication shall include:
11.4.1. the name of the affected client;
11.4.2. the name and location of the body art
establishment involved;
11.4.3. the nature of the injury, infection
complication or disease;
11.4.4. the name and address of the affected
client’s health care provider, if any;
11.4.5. any other information considered relevant to
the situation.
12.0.
Body Art Establishment Permit
12.1. No person may operate a body art establishment except with a valid permit from the Board.
12.2. Applications for a
permit shall be made on forms prescribed by and available from the Board. An applicant shall submit all information
required by the form and accompanying instructions. The term “application” as used herein shall include the original
and renewal applications.
12.3. An
establishment permit shall expire December 31st of the year it is
issued unless revoked sooner by the Board.
12.4. The Board shall
require that the applicant provide, at a minimum, the following information in
order to be issued an establishment permit:
12.4.1. Name, address, and
telephone number of:
(a) the body art
establishment;
(b) the operator of the
establishment; and
(c) the body art
practitioner(s) working at the establishment;
12.4.2. The manufacturer,
model number, model year, and serial number, where applicable, of the autoclave
used in the establishment;
12.4.3. A signed and dated
acknowledgement that the applicant has received, read and understood the
requirements of the Board’s Body Art Regulations;
12.4.4. A scaled drawing of
the physical layout of the establishment. Said scale shall be no smaller than
¼” = 1’;
12.4.5. Exposure Report Plan; and,
12.4.6. Such additional
information as the Board may reasonably require.
12.5. The Board may set an annual fee for the Permit for Body Art Establishment.
12.6. A permit for a body
art establishment shall not be transferable from one place or person to
another.
13.0. Body Art Practitioner
Permit
13.1. No person shall practice body art or perform any body art procedure without first obtaining a Body Art Practitioner Permit from the Board. Categories of this permit shall include Body Piercing, Tattooing, and other like procedures, with the permit stating which category the applicant has been approved for.
13.2. The Board may set an annual fee for the Body Art Practitioner Permit.
13.3. A practitioner shall be a minimum of 18 years of age.
13.4. A Practitioner Permit shall expire December 31st
of the year it is issued unless revoked sooner by the Board.
13.5. Application for a practitioner permit shall include:
13.5.1. name;