The gentlebirth.org website is provided courtesy of
Ronnie Falcao, LM MS,
a homebirth midwife in Mountain View, CA
An interactive resource for moms on easy steps they can take to reduce exposure to chemical toxins during pregnancy. Other excellent resources about avoiding toxins during pregnancy These are easy to read and understand and are beautifully presented. |
Sterilization
-vs-
Disinfection - A Reference Guide to the Difference Between
Disinfectants
Smoke
& Mirrors? - The Real Story - A good discussion of the
different
types of hard surface germicides, their relative effectiveness and
side
effects.
Reprocessing
Methods
for Equipment Used in the Prehospital1 Health-Care Setting
- CDC Guidelines for Sterilization
Infection
Control
in the Physician's Office from The
College of Physicians & Surgeons of Ontario
Fun reading about sterilizing
equipment for making beer.
Our sterilizer is breaking down. We are looking at ways to avoid
having
to sterilize speculums. One place I worked simply cleaned the
specs carefully
and dropped them into a bleach solution overnight, rinsed them in
the morning
and used them.
Running specs through a dishwasher with sufficiently hot water and a good detergent would fill the bill, too. When you think about it, your goal is not to make and keep the specs sterile, but to kill pathogens and to meet aesthetic considerations (as well as to satisfy the lawyers, OSHA, etc.)
We have tried plastic spec: the staff loves them (less work),
many patients
hate them (they click loudly and pinch, in spite of great care,
more often)
and we don't like the expense (you have to buy them, then pay to
dispose
of them through your biohazardous trash system). The folks that
sell surgical
supplies love them, too. We do use them for a satellite clinic,
for logistical
reasons, but have never learned to love them.
We do the bleach method. Scrub the speculum really well and let
it sit
in bleach for 20 minutes and rinse it off. Seems to work fine.
When I arrive at a birth, I soak the umbilical scissors,
blunt-sharps
(for poss emergency epises that never happen) and two cord clamps
(I use
re-usable metal ones) in a cold-sterile solution (Amerse). After
the birth,
I clean the instruments, and the cycle repeats.
I am experimenting with different ways of handling the sterilization of instruments for homebirths, and I'd love to hear how others handle it. Previously, I cleaned them (I use an instrument-cleaning soap followed by a soak in instrument milk), packed in sterilization wrapper and at home, after the birth, baked in oven with a pot of water underneath for a couple hours til the sterilization bar turned brown. I was finding this hard on my instruments to be subjected to the dry heat, and if I had a lull between births, I questioned the sterility of the instruments, the packaging would get little rips in it, the wrappers are expensive to waste.
So lately, I've been doing a cold-sterilization technique taught me by a doctor that feels safer for my instruments and more time-efficient. I'd love feedback anyone has on cold-sterilization methods. I clean the instruments as above. When I arrive at a birth, I soak the umbilical scissors, blunt-sharps (for poss emergency epises that never happen) and two cord clamps (I use re-usable metal ones) in a cold-sterile solution (Amerse). After the birth, I clean the instruments, and the cycle repeats.
Though I am still experimenting with ideas, the cold-sterile
technique
seems more desirable so far, feels like a "fresher"
sterilization...what
do the other homebirth midwives do...what do the hospital midwives
think
about acceptable methods of sterilization for OOH births (no
autoclave,
no pressure cooker)?
Do you consider your instruments contaminated until they have been soaked in Amerse? Do you handle them with gloves?
I have a box of Amerse packets, and it says at a 1:32 dilution it kills "pathogenic bacteria and fungi such as S. aureus, S. choleraesuis, Ps. aeruginosa, M. tuberculosis (effective in 10 minutes at 20 deg. C) and C. albicans. Amerse is virucidal against influenza A2 (Hong Kong) Herpes simplex I and II, Type 2 Adenovirus and Vaccinia on hard, inanimate, surfaces in 10 minutes at 20 deg. C."
What about HIV and hepatitis? This has been my concern about using this product and considering the instruments sterile.
There is a product carried by Cascade called Wavecide that is called a sterilant, however it must be used full strength and is very expensive. It is effective against HIV.
In "Practical Skills Guide for Midwifery" the suggested cold Chemical sterilization method is:
With gloved hands, scrub equip. with soap and rinse. Measure 4 parts water to 1 part Cidex, soak 10 min., rinse and allow to dry, package and label to indicate sterilization and date.
Seems to me the rinse & allow to dry part renders them
non-sterile.
Soap and water will kill HIV. Hep is nasty and tough though, and needs heat or chemicals I think.
Yeah, I agree with your concern. Why rinse and air dry?
I like simple heat processing -- if you wrap and sterilize then you never touch the instruments again.
Or -- I can just boil again at birth and IF THE PAN IS KEPT COVERED then the instruments will still be sterile
(don't know how many times I've seen folks boil instruments and
leave
them to sit for hours in an uncovered pan - - - or boil them and
then dump
them into a separate container with (usually, nasty old betadine)
and then
let them sit uncovered for hours! If you boil your instruments
then just
let them sit there with the lid on!
Personally, I felt the purchase of a small pressure cooker very worthwhile. It also is capable of creating some delicious meals too!
As far as protecting your wrappers from tears in between births I do the following:
After the pressure cooker, because there is some moisture, I
place them
in a very low temp oven until the pkg is totally dry. Then I
immediately
place them into a large zip-lock bag, squeeze all the air out
& seal
it. This protects them then from any moisture & tears. I also
have
found using this method, that instead of purchasing the fancy
instrument
wrap paper, I just use brown grocery bags - much cheaper &
they work
just as well. I double layer the wrap just as I did using the real
stuff.
I have been using Amerse off and on for about 2 years and really like it. I still heat sterilize a set of instruments that I carry around for births where the head is crowning when I get there. I just started having a packet of Amerse added to my kits.
I still use my original set of instruments that I bought in
1981.......I've
added to them.....a second set of hemostats and scissors, one of
those
nifty curved cord cutting scissors and the cord bander. It's hard
to tell
the difference between the old hemostats and the ones that are
about 8
years old. Buy good stuff, take good care of it and it lasts
forever.
I generally don't sterilize instruments at clients home. Often
don't
even use instruments. I have parents purchase scissors in their
birth kits
and give instructions on sterilizing them. I use sterile plastic
cord clamps
(also in kit) and their scissors to cut the cord. I carry two sets
of sterile
instruments (steam sterilized)consisting of two curved hem. and
scissors.
I also carry two sets of suturing instruments (sterile, of
course).
Don't worry about cold sterilization for HIV.....almost anything kills it, even soap and water. What you do need to worry about is HepB (hepatitis) which is a very very hardy virus. It can be cultured off surfaces weeks or months later. This can be taken care of by bleach soaking.
Household bleach 1 part to 10 parts water is effective against the hepatitis virus. This is what we used in the hospital to clean the insides and outsides of the hemodialysis machines.
At our Miami Center we use cold sterilant after a short bleach soak followed by heat sterilization.
Right now I'm really happy with steam sterilization with a
pressure
cooker, thanks to all who answered my questions on this list about
it.
We set up all the "important" stuff on a cookie tray, covered by a
chux
pad. The sterilized instruments go underneath, the bulb syringe,
pit, meth,
(we hide these because they make the mom nervous) herbs, opened 4
x 4s,
some gloves
Use a gardening basket to carry essentials. In the center of the
basket
she keeps gloves and gauze, in the little side pockets all around
are the
bulb syringe, deLee, a squeeze bottle of olive oil, another of
betadine
scrub, cord clamps, blood tubes, syringes and needles, and
homeopathics.
It has handles and she puts it right in her big bag (a zipper
sports bag)
and it comes out and goes in with minimum trouble. She sits it
right on
the bed next to her, and everything is at hand. Things don't spill
out
'cause the side pockets have elastic.
I use a Rubbermaid sweater box. I stock it with everything I need
for
a birth, gloves, gauze, deLee, instruments, etc.
I switched to a large heavy duty plastic box (called action
packer).
i can put an enormous amount of "stuff" in it (lots of extras and
seldom
needed things), and everything stays where it's put! -- it doesn't
fall
all over inside like the "bags" did -- and anyone opening the box
can easily
find things... It has a sturdy, lockable lid -- strong enough to
stand
or sit on. I carry my "essentials" - all the things I (might) need
for
the actual birth in a medium sized cosmetic-type box (though a
tackle box
also works well); this fits quite nicely in the big box. The other
surprising
advantage to this box is that it's exactly the height for a birth
stool!
Found out by accident once (mom wanted something to sit on and the
ready
made birth stool was way too low for comfort) --tossed a chux on
the box
and we were ready!
I recently picked up a portable lap table made for children. It
has
built in pockets on the sides and a large flat top surface - just
about
cookie sheet size (which is what I've usually used). It's made of
one piece
molded plastic; easy to clean; shaped like a rectangular box with
the long
back and front and the bottom removed. I'm stoked about the side
pockets.
I have everything necessary for the birth preset in my
(Rubbermaid sweater
box) birth box. The heating pad, towels and hat go on the lid and
are warmed
for the birth. After the birth I restock my birth box from the
birth kit
they ordered.
I use four Tupperware boxes to organize my birth bag. One for
let's
run in and catch a baby. Everything you really need to do a birth.
The
next is all the suturing equipment. The third is the newborn box
with the
scale, tape measure, etc. This is a smaller one. The fourth is
extra stuff.
Works really well.
Another trick is to have the heating pad set on warm in a pillow case with the receiving blankets and a cookie sheet in it. This makes for a nice place to work on the baby in case you have to have the baby flat for open airway purposes. If you need to transfer apart from Mom's body for any reason, then just unplug the heating pad, put the baby on top of the pillowcase-cookie sheet setup, wrap with a wool or solar blanket (not too tightly if you think you'll need access to baby's body). Should stay warm for awhile!
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