Decontamination Sciences Flashcards

1
Q

GDC requirement

A

1.5 Treat patients in a hygienic & safe environment
- Health & Safety
- Decontamination
- Medical Devices
Important for patient perceptions

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2
Q

operator

A

defined as any person with the authority to operate a sterilizer/washer disinfector including the noting of device readings and simple housekeeping duties

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3
Q

record keeping for decon

A

If it is not documented it did not happen

Audit been through decontamination and sterilisation practice and quality check

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4
Q

shortcomings in dental practice decon before addressing

A

Several shortcomings
- Combined with eating area, storage for staff

Potential mix up of clean and dirty

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5
Q

dental practices scotland now

A

among the best as of high standards and continued training

Packaged sterilised equipment – how they are stored

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6
Q

standardised way equipment stored in dental hospitals and practices

A

Package sterilised instruments have standard in hospital and in practice
- equal level

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7
Q

3 levels of spaudling classifications

A

critical - needs to e sterile

semi-critical - sterile preferable/high level disinfectant

non-critical - disinfectant/clean

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8
Q

Critical spaudling classification

A

– devices that enter tissue that is usually sterile or enters the vascular system

  • STERILE
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9
Q

non-critical spaudling classification

A

– Instruments have contact with intact skin only

– Disinfectant/ clean

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10
Q

semi-critical spaudling classfication

A

– Instruments have contact with intact mucous membranes but does not penetrate sterile tissue

– STERILE preferable/ high level disinfectant but these have no place in dental practices

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11
Q

eg dental semi-critical instuments

A

mirror (sterile preferable)

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12
Q

e.g. dental critical instruments

A

handpiece

water irrigator

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13
Q

what does the rise of ‘surgical’ dentistry mean

A

increased demand for sterile instruments

  • more invasive
    mucoperiosteum flaps etc
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14
Q

4 reasons why we need sterile instruments

A

reduces probability of infection transmission

International standard for surgical instruments.

Legislative and professional standards.

Maintaining high quality of care for patients

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15
Q

invasive surgery needs

A

Any invasive surgery need sterile instruments

  • Wrapped before going into steriliser
  • When receive from steriliser will remain sterile until unwrapped

all dental surgical instruments

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16
Q

issue with type N non-vacuum sterilisers

A

evidence non-vacuum sterilizers (type N) fail to achieve sterilization conditions inside dental handpieces

17
Q

sterile means

A

For a terminally-sterilized medical device to be designated “STERILE”, the theoretical probability of there being a viable micro-organism present on/in the device shall be equal to or less than 1 x10^(-6)

18
Q

life cycle of re-useable surgical instruments

A

acquisition - purchase/loan

cleaning ->
disinfection ->
inspection ->
(disposal - scrap/return)

packaging -> 
sterilisation ->
transport -> 
storage -> 
use -> 
transport -> 
cleaning again
19
Q

operator level of decon sciences

A
Keep it simple
- Single use devices where practical
- Automated washer-disinfectors
- Inspection
- Pouch it (paper or clear bag)
& sterilize it (type B process)

Record Keeping

Additional resources SDCEP – decontamination in practice

20
Q

BBVs

A
HIV 
Hep B 
Hep C
vCJD
Herpes Simplex
21
Q

HIV transmission dental concern

A

Aware of HIV transmission in dentistry
- news report from the USA about patient Kimberly Bergalis experience

There are many publications about this “Acer” Florida dentist case & HIV transmission in dentistry.

little evidence of HIV and dental transmission link

22
Q

hep B and C infection transmission in dental practice

A

concerns (recent as 2009)

large press converage

23
Q

more common BBV dental transmission with

A

herpes simplex

24
Q

improvements in decon dental transparency

A

Improvements prompted most recently by
2007 DOH risk assessment for vCJD & dentistry
- Press influence public perception need to be transparent and active about dental decontamination procedures

25
Q

why worry about vCJD?

A

Prions more difficult to inactivate on surgical devices

Infectivity can survive steam sterilization at 134°C for 18 minutes

26
Q

dental relevance of prion research

A

This study provides evidence that in animal models;

Infectivity was found in both dental pulp and the gingival margin within 3 weeks of challenge with infectious prion

Exposure to deliberately contaminated dental files, 68 of 70 mice (97%) of mice developed clinical disease – worst case scenario

27
Q

cases of vCJD

A

Cases are low (n=178 UK) but asymptomatic carriage may be relatively high

Suspected asymptomatic vCJD carriage in UK = approx. 1 in 2,000 (but wide confidence intervals)

28
Q

risk of bacterial cross infection in dentistry

A

Post operative treatment or complication of dental surgery

  • Need investigated and monitored
  • better documentation needed for post op

Infection transmission in dental practice
- An implant periapical lesion leading to acute osteomyelitis with isolation of Staph aureus

29
Q

S.aureus and oral infections

A

This study provide evidence that S. aureus can cause dento-alveolar infections.
- N= 1,986 from 11,312 specimens (18%)

But what is the source & how did cross infection occur?
- endogenous or exogenous ?

30
Q

what bacteria can be recovered from inside dental hand-pieces (after use, before decon)

A

Oral streptococci,
Pseudomonas spp &
Staphylococcus aureus.

Need to get sterilisation in dental practice – type B or vacuum