- The CDC recommends only a few processes to sterilize medical devices and equipment. Pressurized steam, hydrogen peroxide, ethylene oxide, and dry heating are just some of the preferred CDC guidelines for sterilization.
- Steamed heat is preferred in most sterilization processes since it does not line the equipment with chemicals. Objects such as surgical equipment, catheters and ultrasound probes are steamed for sterilization. Equipment such as respiratory devices and endoscopes need chemical sterilization since these equipment products contain mucous and tissue after their removal from a patient.
- Noncritical items must be sterilized in order to retain public health safety. Medical equipment such as clothing, even if it is thrown away afterward, needs to be washed in a chemical bath. Other examples of noncritical medical items which must be sterilized include crutches, computers used by the patient during a hospital stay, utensils, bed pans, and blood pressure cuffs.
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