
Launch your journey as a dental sterilization technician and assistant by mastering infection control protocols, instrument demonstrations, and province-level regulatory guidelines.
Public health audits investigate dental offices for infection control, safeguarding patients. Audits assess waiting area hygiene, PPE, hand hygiene, sterilization practices, and compliance with guidelines.
Explore dental sterilization monitoring with autoclave validation, air-evacuation test cards, biological indicators, and class four and five chemical indicators to ensure infection-free instruments and thorough record-keeping.
Ensure water quality in dental offices by flushing lines, using enzymatic cleaners, and filtration to provide pure water for patients, while applying barriers and biohazard protocols to prevent cross-contamination.
Ensure safe sharps container placement and loose instruments handling, wrap instruments in pouches for sterilization, and maintain cassette orientation in autoclaves along with staff immunization records.
Maintain detailed sterilization records and log sheets to verify instrument reprocessing, cycle data, and biological indicator testing, while enforcing a strict holding and workflow to support infection control.
The information in this course is to to provide a framework for an in-house training program in oral healthcare settings, and to serve as a resource for dental sterilization assistants , technicians and oral healthcare personnel wishing to review evidence-based information on specific topics related to infection prevention, hazardous waste management, and hazard communication compliance.
Regular review of the information in this course will help train the new staff, prevent cross contaminations and infractions, so preventing unnecessary fines and closures. In This Course You will learn about the following:
1. Public Health Audit
2. Infection Control in Reception/Waiting Areas
3. Infection Control in Dental Operatories
4. Infection Control in Sterilization Areas/ Labs
5. Personal Protective Equipment
6. Sterilization Monitoring
7. How to handle sharps and biohazards
8. How to maintain the desired water quality in your dental office that is fit for dental use.
9. How to sterilize Critical items, such as surgical instruments and periodontal scalers, are those used to penetrate soft tissue or bone.
10. How to disinfect Noncritical patient-care items (e.g., radiograph head/cone, blood pressure cuff, facebow) , those that contact only skin.
The information presented in this course represents basic infection prevention expectations for safe care in dental health care settings. This guidance is not all-encompassing. DHCP and others are encouraged to refer to the original source documents provided by the provincial and federal regulatory authorities.