Special Edition on Sterile Processing Imperatives Special Edition- Sterile Processing Imperatives | Page 28

Contaminated Instruments Point-of-Use Instrument Prep and Cleaning: Building a Model for Success DATE By Timothy Brooks, BS, CSPM T here have been several papers addressing the impor- tance of point-of-use prep and cleaning of surgical instruments in the operating room (OR) over the past few years. However, it’s no longer just for the OR, it’s for every hospital department, including facility-owned clinics or ambulatory surgery centers – they have a similar responsibility to complete the same process. This includes transportation of devices and instruments to and from facilities that must content with ever-growing volume and market changes. Reduction of bioburden and time are key factors. The longer that bioburden — of any volume — remains on the surface of a surgical instrument, visible or not, the more critical the point-of-use process needs to be. Adding to the pressures is the renewed focus and attention from the Joint Commission during hospitals surveys, whose surveyors may question your organization’s ability to reduce the risk of infections associated with medical equipment, devices and supplies. Recently, the ECRI Institute issued its 2020 annual list of the top 10 health technology hazards, with sterile processing errors coming in at No. 3 for ambulatory settings, including medical and dental offices. As the ECRI Institute noted, the challenge associated with sterile processing concerns is, “failure to consistently and effectively sterilize contaminated items can lead to patient infections.” The question here is: Have these healthcare providers been exposed to point-of-use, have a process, and understand the issues? The Association of periOperative Registered Nurses (AORN) and the Association for the Advancement of Medical Instrumentation (AAMI) both say that the effectiveness of cleaning and decontamination is greatly improved when scrub technicians maintain clean instruments at the point-of-use. However, in today’s busy sterile processing department (SPD), the single most important step starts with the user, regardless if that is in the OR as they move to decontamination for further disinfection. The complexity of today’s surgical instruments and the need to maintain consistent room turnover put even more stress on the process, and a great deal of pressure on the scrub technician in the OR and all users supported by the SPD. Surgical instrument inventories are generally too low to keep up with demands, resulting in overbooking, process failures and shortcuts. When the scrub technician maintains clean instruments during a procedure and stays to a standard practice of keeping 28 Area Not Met in Decon Mark All That Apply Cover Open Carts When Transporting SURGEON ROOM# OR - END TIME Required Point-of-Use Steps CART # Initial Legibly Before Sending Cart to Decontamination Protect Delicate Instrument – Rigid and Flexible Scopes, Cameras, Delicate Instruments Used and Unused Instruments - Separated and Cover with Wet Towel in Original Set Visible Bio-burden Reduced/Wiped Sharps Removed/Protected/Angled Down Instruments Unlocked/Disassembled Transport Sprayed Used Covered with Moistened Towel(s) Scrub Tech RN Circulator ATTENTION: CSPD Decontamination STAFF: DO NOT PROCESS UNACCEPTABLE TRAYS UNTIL ALL POINTS ARE CORRECTED RECEIVED AS: Notify OR When Unacceptable: √ Select One Acceptable Unacceptable Condition of Cart and Contents Corrected by - Initials Date - Time Revised: 01/2020 – Print on Red Paper Call Front Desk for Follow-up Support CSPD SUPERVISOR - LEAD CHARGE RN DATE: ____________________ DATE: ________________ TIME: ____________________ TIME: _________________ Name: _______________________ Name: ___________________ Person Completing Person Completing instrument within sets together, they make the job in SPD safer, easier and quicker. The use of a moistened towel as part of the process needs further education as this has benefits in maintaining moisture/humidity and separation of used and unused instrument in a set. When SPD staff in the decontamination area see the wet towel covering the instruments, they know that these items were used, received point-of-use cleaning, and require more attention then the unused instruments. This also needs to be addressed in a formal institutional policy. Unknowingly, the scrub technician and users from hospital departments and clinics have a greater impact on instrument repairs and operating expense for the replacement of surgical instruments. By maintaining the cleanliness of surgical instruments at the point of use, there is an unseen ripple effect in the management and processing of surgical instruments — it’s called operational cost savings. But, even more important, is patient safety and surgeon satisfaction. Managing surgical instrumentation correctly truly starts at the point-of-use and moves through the process, whose components include containment, transportation, and moisture/humidity management with lasting effects, regardless of where that is. Building this culture isn’t as easy as it sounds, and requires several steps supported by an official institutional policy. Rarely do you find a policy that is solely directed to managing point-of-use cleaning, but that is only the beginning. Let’s add in properly designed tracking forms, to include a biohazard Sterile Processing Imperatives 2020 • www.healthcarehygienemagazine.com