JOHN PRENDERGAST, decontamination engineer and WAYNE SPENCER, independent consultant on decontamination and healthcare engineering, report on a recent study day held in Birmingham, staged by the Central Sterilising Club, entitled Update on Decontamination Standards.
The recent study day, held in the Botanical Gardens, Birmingham, was the latest in a series of popular annual decontamination events organised by the Central Sterilising Club (CSC). The CSC is a multi-disciplinary club of professionals from the public and private sectors, which was set up over 50 years ago, originally with the aim of discussing and reviewing sterilisation methods as they were in 1960. The sterilisation sector has changed dramatically over the years; it now encompasses the whole field of decontamination which, where possible, follows the principles of the reusable life cycle. The revised lifecycle from the new CFPP0101 Part A guidance is shown in Figure 1.
CSC’s varied membership
The membership of the Club is varied, ranging from microbiologists, infection control officers, theatre management personnel, equipment manufacturers and their representatives, to sterile services department managers, endoscopy managers, estates officers, and authorising engineers (decontamination). The all-day seminar in Birmingham attracted around 130 delegates. Uppermost in their minds was the subject of new guidance recently issued by the Department of Health in England concerning the decontamination of medical devices. The Choice Framework for local Policy and Procedures (CFPP) 01 series has been developed to replace some of the muchloved and familiar guidance documents previously issued in Health Technical Memoranda form. The design and format of these documents has been controversial, and the term ‘choice’ remains somewhat controversial in a sector that has based itself on promoting the adherence to, and compliance with, standards (both national and international). The day’s first presenter was Stuart Line, author of the eagerly awaited CFPP 01-06 ‘Decontamination of Flexible Endoscopes’, and a retired microbiologist and former Authorised Person (Sterilisers).
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