What Are the Key Roles You Play?
By joining the sterile processing unit, you get to team up with a small group of dedicated personnel. The department has four key subsections where you may work in one area per shift or cycle through different areas throughout the day.
Decontamination
An average day in sterile processing starts in the decontamination area. You receive, soak, and clean used surgical equipment in cleaning trays. Manual or mechanical cleaning using water with detergent removes visible foreign material like soil, dust, secretions, excretions, and blood. During the cleaning process, you are required to wear personal protective equipment, such as:
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Rubber gloves
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Full-length face shields
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Face masks
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Cleaning gowns
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Goggles
The next step is disinfection which reduces the number of active disease-causing pathogens on medical equipment. Chemical disinfectants like alcohol, formaldehyde, hydrogen peroxide, and peracetic acid are used during disinfection. This stage, however, isn’t sufficient to inactivate some viruses, bacteria, fungal spores, and prions. These are eliminated through sterilization, the final step in the decontamination process.
Inspection, Assembly, and Packaging
After decontamination, you inspect the instruments for damage and cleanliness. Any contaminated or damaged equipment is re-cleaned or discarded with proper documentation. Afterward, you can assemble and package the surgical items in rigid containers, trays, and peel-open pouches, or with stock roll film and sterilization wraps. The packaging material acts as a barrier to microbial recontamination during handling and prepares the device for sterilization.
Sterilization eliminates resilient bacterial spores in the final stage of decontamination. Steam sterilization is one of the most common ways of achieving sterilization. It is an inexpensive and non-toxic process that uses moist heat in saturated steam under pressure. The packed items are arranged to allow free circulation of steam or other sterilant agents like ethylene oxide and hydrogen peroxide gas plasma.
Sterile Storage
After sterilization, you can store the items in long-term designated storage units. The sterile packaging comes with mechanical, biological, and chemical indicators that monitor quality during storage. The stored medical devices are reviewed after specific durations to ensure they aren’t contaminated.
Distribution Through the Case Cart System
As a sterile processing technician, you are tasked with workflow management. With different health departments requesting supplies, you have to balance orders, cancellations, reschedules, and add-ons. Case carts present a convenient solution for availing surgical supplies while maintaining sterile integrity during distribution.
Choose MedCerts Online Certification Training
To start your journey assisting patient care through sterile processing, enroll today in MedCert’s 14-week online training program. With MedCerts, you get the necessary certification to be part of a highly skilled team in a growing profession. Review the course enrollment requirements for eligibility in this noble field.