Title: Element VCleaning, Disinfection,
1Element V-Cleaning, Disinfection, Sterilization
- Problem Choosing reprocessing methods for
safety and integrity of patient care equipment - Controlling the Problem Professional
responsibility for maintenance of safety
environment
2Universal Principles
- Instruments, medical devices and equipment should
be managed and reprocessed according to
recommended/appropriate methods regardless of a
patients diagnosis except for cases of suspected
prion disease. - Industry guidelines as well as equipment and
chemical manufacturer recommendations should be
used to develop and update reprocessing policies
and procedures. - Written instructions should be available for each
instrument, medical device, and equipment
reprocessed.
3Potential for contamination
- Type of medical device, equipment or
environmental surface. - Frequency of hand contact with instrument medical
device, equipment, or environmental surface. - Potential for contamination with body surfaces or
environmental sources of microorganisms. - Level of contamination.
4Steps of Reprocessing
- Pre-Cleaning
- Cleaning
- Disinfection
- Sterilization
5 Choice of Reprocessing Methods
- Intended use
- Critical instruments and medical devices
- Semi-critical instruments and medical devices
- Non-critical instruments and medical devices
- Manufacturers recommendations
- Compatibility among equipment, materials and
chemicals - Equipment heat and pressure tolerance
- Time and temperature requirements for reprocessing
6Critical instruments and devices
- Enter a sterile body site or bloodstream
- Must be sterile
- surgical instruments
- Implants
- Plasma
- Must be cleaned prior to processing
- Steam, heat, ethylene oxide gas
- Monitor time, temperature, pressure,
concentration - Maintain an autoclave log
7 Semi-Critical Instruments Devices
- Have contact with mucous membrane or non-intact
skin - Need sterilization or high-level disinfection
- scopes
- tonometer
- speculum
- Chemical sterilization techniques. Use full time
mandated for agent selected
8Non-Critical Instruments Devices
- Have contact with intact skin
- blood pressure cuff, tub, electrode
- Have low risk of transmitting infection
- may cause colonization
- Use detergent or low-level germicide
9Cleaning Environmental Surfaces
- Use EPA registered disinfectants in accordance
with manufacturers instructions. - Follow manufacturers instructions for cleaning
and maintaining noncritical medical equipment. - Keep housekeeping surfaces (e.g., floors, walls,
and tabletops) visibly clean on a regular basis
and clean spills promptly. - CDC Guidelines for Environmental Infection
Control in Health-Care Facilities
10- BC Centre for Disease Control
11Effectiveness of reprocessing instruments,
medical, devices and equipment
- Cleaning prior to disinfection
- Disinfection
- Selection and use of disinfectants
- Presence of organic matter
- Presence of biofilms
- Monitoring
- Post-disinfection handling and storage
12 Effectiveness of sterilization process
- Effectiveness of the sterilization process is
dependent on - Selection and use of sterilization methods
- Monitoring the sterilization process
- Post sterilization handling and storage
13How Equipment Gets Contaminated
- Contamination can occur at any point in handling
or reprocessing - Failure to reprocess or dispose of items between
patients - Inadequate cleaning
- Inadequate disinfection or sterilization
- Contamination of disinfectant or rinse solutions
- Improper packaging, storage and handling
- Inadequate/inaccurate record keeping of
reprocessing requirements
14 Preventing Cross-Contamination
- Identify surfaces or equipment which require
between patient cleaning. - Identify practices which contribute to hand
contamination and the potential for
cross-contamination. - Implications of reuse of disposable equipment or
devices.
15 Disinfection and sterilization methods and
agents based on practice setting and
responsibilities
- All health professionals must
- Understand core concepts and principles
- Standard and Universal Precautions
- Cleaning, disinfection, and sterilization
- Appropriate application of safe practices in
handing instruments, medical devices and
equipment - Designation and physical separation of patient
care areas from cleaning and reprocessing areas
is strongly recommended by NYSDOH
16 Disinfection and sterilization methods and
agents based on practice setting and
responsibilities
- Health professionals in settings where handling,
cleaning and reprocessing is performed elsewhere - Verify with those responsible for reprocessing
what steps are necessary prior to submission - Pre-cleaning
- Soaking
17Disinfection and sterilization methods and
agents based on practice setting and
responsibilities
- Health professionals with primary or supervisory
responsibilities for equipment or device
reprocessing - Must also know the consequences of reuse of
single-use/disposable instruments, medical
devices or equipment - Determine Appropriate reprocessing practices
18Selection Criteria
- Antimicrobial efficacy
- Time constraints
- Compatibility among equipment/material
- Toxicity
- Residual effect
- Ease of use
- Stability
- Odor
- cost
- Monitoring
19 FDA regulations for reuse of medical devices
- Medical devices rented/leased from third parties
may not be adequately disinfected - Follow manufacturers specifications
- Follow FDA/ANSI/AAMI sterilization standards
- Do initial cleaning in procedure room
- Devices should not be placed in disinfectant
prior to cleaning - Devices should be dry before gas sterilizing
- Report adverse events