Crystal Clear Products (2000) Ltd.

Crystal Medic and HTM105

Crystal Medic and HTM105

With HTM105 covering so many decontamination issues within the practice – it could leave you wondering which system you should improve on next. One thing in the memorandum I would like to mention is the quality of purified water that you should be using in your sterilisers, the fact that when I read the article it prompted more questions than answers surely means it’s worth discussing.

HTM105 itself does not actually list the specific contents or upper limits for elements contained within the purified water. The memo requires your purified water to conform to BS-EN 13060, which – within the industry is not a particularly recognised standard when compared to other standards such as British Pharmacopeia (BP) and European Pharmacopeia (EP).

Unless you are willing to part with this amount of money BS13060 is not an easy specification to get your hands on. BP and EP is the specification we would normally be required to manufacture and until recently BS13060 was a standard that we didn’t even analytically test to. BS13060 actually requires more testing and analysing than BP and EP, within the specific elements dissolved in the purified water.

Essentially if you use Crystal Medic purified water, its one less thing to worry about – because we have rigorous in house and outsourced testing. Every bottle you purchase is guaranteed to achieve the specification required by HTM105. We can supply certificates to prove this which helps you show you have took due diligence in choosing the correct purified water for successful decontamination.

Best Practices

Best Practices

The purpose of Health Technical Memorandum 01-05 is to progressively raise the quality of decontamination in dental surgeries and facilities using methods highlighted in HTM 01-05, obviously leading to less risk of disease and contamination throughout the work environment. This Progress towards achieving best practice could be seen as almost a never-ending process of development with the discovery of new and often more adequate sterilization techniques.

Some of the key issues or areas concerned with the misuse of purified water and neglect of a could-be contaminated work place and instruments include the following:

  • Improve separation of decontamination processes from other activities and enhance the distinction between clean and dirty workflows around the workplace.
  • Provide and develop suitable storage for instruments that have been sterilized with purified water, which inevitably reduces exposure to air and a possible risk of pathogenic contamination. The system should be focused on safe and orderly storage of instruments. This will ensure that instrument storage is well protected in the appropriate clean room against the possibility of exposure of stored instruments to contaminated aerosols.
  • Install a modern validated washer-disinfector of adequate capacity to remove the need for manual washing with purified water. If this isn’t possible, workers should take every measure to ensure that decontamination tasks are done separately, or using another form of sterilization to avoid the risk of contamination.
  • Dental hand pieces should be cleaned and sterilized with purified water and other sterilization products after each patient has been examined or treated.

Sterlisation and Customer Satisfaction

Sterlisation and Customer Satisfaction

When it comes to clients choosing a dental facility, there comes ample choice- I want to talk about why they could choose one practice over another. This applies to those in the private or NHS sector who invest in reliable contractors to provide them with professional services such as autoclaves engineers, tooling supplies, dental water, or purified water. This is only my point of view from someone in the industry having seen it all – visiting and providing di water to hundreds of different setup practices all over the country.

From a clients perspective there are so many different dental surgeries to choose from. How do you choose the right dental surgery for you? Is it a question of prices (both privately and NHS run surgeries)? Or are their certain elements to look for in a good quality, reliable dental surgery?

Just having friendly staff, a great customer service ethic, with nicely decorated rooms is the norm now, however a lot of clients will look deeper into your surgery, particularly those who have previously had bad experiences with unhygienic dental practices. Showing your clients you run up to date and consistent decontamination procedures is something to think about remembering ro water or dental water is only a small part – but key part to the process. Important key issues or attention to detail like these not only make and form impressions with the customer but could be vital for the safety of your clients.

In Summary one way you can separate yourself from the competition is to sell the fact that you have raised the quality of decontamination in your facility by remembering to document and promote your processes like the dental water you use is pure water to a recognised standard. I think when a client knows how seriously you take sterilisation and customer safety they are more comfortable and happy to remain a good customer for years to come.