We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve your experience. This includes personalizing content and advertising. To learn more, click here. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies. Cookie Policy.

Features Partner Sites Information LinkXpress hp
Sign In
Advertise with Us
Radcal IBA  Group

Download Mobile App




Sterilization Technology Kills Hospital Bedbugs

By HospiMedica International staff writers
Posted on 08 May 2013
A new hospital sterilization system eradicates highly drug-resistant bacteria as well as a problem increasingly plaguing hospitals—bedbugs. More...


The AsepticSure sterilization system is a portable, affordable, easily operated system that is placed in the center of the room scheduled to be cleaned. The room vents and doors are then sealed with a cleanly removable adhesive tape product. The system is then turned on from outside of the room through a remote wireless computer interface, and the room is filled with a patented ozone-based gas formula with specific humidity and charge strength.

Following the charge period, the sterilization process is remotely turned off and a separate technology is employed that restores the atmosphere inside the room. The end result leaves the treated room sterile of pathogens with a sweet, fresh oxygen-charged atmosphere. Turnaround time for reuse of rooms up to 113 cubic meters in size is 80–90 minutes; this includes decontamination of carpets, drapes and medical equipment, all to the 6 log sterilization standard. The AsepticSure sterilization system is a product of Medizone International (San Francisco, CA, USA).

“The bedbugs, and particularly the eggs of bedbugs, are even harder to kill than the spores of the bacteria,” said Professor Dick Zoutman, MD, an infectious disease specialist at Queen’s University (Ontario, Canada), and chief medical officer of Medizone International. “Medizone is now working to adapt the system to kill bedbugs in a faster and more effective manner, both for hospitals and other settings as well.”

More than a third of pest-management companies treated bedbug infestations in hospitals in 2012, 6% more than the year before and more than twice as many as in 2010, according to a survey released today by the National Pest Management Association (Fairfax, VA, USA). While bedbugs do not transmit infections to humans, their bites can lead to secondary infections when victims scratch, opening themselves up to bacteria. This is especially problematic in hospitals, where there is a greater likelihood of infection with Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA).

Related Links:

Medizone International
National Pest Management Association



Platinum Member
STI Test
Vivalytic Sexually Transmitted Infection (STI) Array
Gold Member
Electrode Solution and Skin Prep
Signaspray
Autoclave
Advance
External Defibrillator
HeartSave Y | YA
Read the full article by registering today, it's FREE! It's Free!
Register now for FREE to HospiMedica.com and get access to news and events that shape the world of Hospital Medicine.
  • Free digital version edition of HospiMedica International sent by email on regular basis
  • Free print version of HospiMedica International magazine (available only outside USA and Canada).
  • Free and unlimited access to back issues of HospiMedica International in digital format
  • Free HospiMedica International Newsletter sent every week containing the latest news
  • Free breaking news sent via email
  • Free access to Events Calendar
  • Free access to LinkXpress new product services
  • REGISTRATION IS FREE AND EASY!
Click here to Register








Channels

Surgical Techniques

view channel
Image: Professor Bumsoo Han and postdoctoral researcher Sae Rome Choi of Illinois co-authored a study on using DNA origami to enhance imaging of dense pancreatic tissue (Photo courtesy of Fred Zwicky/University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign)

DNA Origami Improves Imaging of Dense Pancreatic Tissue for Cancer Detection and Treatment

One of the challenges of fighting pancreatic cancer is finding ways to penetrate the organ’s dense tissue to define the margins between malignant and normal tissue. Now, a new study uses DNA origami structures... Read more
Copyright © 2000-2025 Globetech Media. All rights reserved.