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February 14, 2013

MISSION, Kan. — Focus on sustainability, combined with education, making difference in how healthcare views reusables

MISSION, Kan. — Since the 1960s, when disposable products first appeared in hospitals, the textile services industry has fought a largely losing battle against disposables for market share. As a result, many healthcare professionals have only known single-use disposable items in the operating room (OR).

However, the current focus on sustainability, combined with education, is starting to make a difference in how healthcare professionals view reusable textiles. For example, several healthcare groups have recommended that member hospitals increase their use of reusable textiles in order to minimize waste and its associated disposal costs. And the textile services industry now has life-cycle analyses and case studies that support reusable textiles as the environmentally preferable choice over single-use disposable items.

The American Reusable Textile Association (ARTA) recently conducted its second webinar for Practice Greenhealth on the benefits of reusable surgical textiles. The information from that webinar and other ARTA resources is presented here for the consideration of suppliers and laundry operators.

HOW TO CONVERT TO OR INCREASE USE OF REUSABLE SURGICAL TEXTILES (CONTINUED)

Quality Assurance — One of the biggest objections to reusable surgical textiles is the belief that they are not as hygienic as disposable items. Stains sometimes don’t come out textiles, but that doesn’t mean they aren’t clean or their performance is lessened. Education is critical in this area.

According to Barb Fordyce, surgical textiles manager, Healthcare Systems Cooperative Laundry (HSCL) in St. Paul, Minn., once clients are aware of quality control measures followed by a laundry, they are more amenable to using surgical gowns, drapes and packs. HSCL offers 40 custom packs assembled in its pack room and sterilized at the client hospital.

Its quality controls process:

• Suter Tester — HSCL keeps a log that records quality testing for every load of surgical textiles. “We use the Suter Tester to test two items from every load (one item with more than 30 washings and one item with less).”

• Sample Test Grid — In addition HSCL has a sample test grid on every surgical gown and drape. Every item is visually inspected and if the quality is sufficient, the inspector marks the grid. Grids typically allow for 50 uses.

• Accreditation and Certification — Healthcare laundry is different from any market segment and requires special handling. Securing accreditation or certification is an important means of verifying that an operation is following the industry’s highest standards for processing healthcare textiles. The Healthcare Laundry Accreditation Council (HLAC) and the Textile Rental Services Association (TRSA) offers opportunities to earn such certification.

CHANGE IS HARD

Healthcare professionals generally have been well trained to use disposable items, from paper wipes to surgical gowns and drapes. For the most part, disposable single-use items are all they have ever known in the OR and many other areas of the hospital.

“Any change is hard for people,” says Ed McCauley, CEO of United Hospital Services in Indianapolis. “But once clients have made the switch to reusable textiles, they are typically happy with the change.”

“Inertia can be a problem,” says Fordyce. “I had a nurse convinced that reusables were the best choice, but she backed out because she didn’t want to do the work the conversion would require. You really need an internal champion on the client side to push for reusables.”

For hospitals serious about sustainable operations, reducing waste and its cost, increasing the use of reusable surgical textiles, packs and garments can offer an effective solution.

While any change in hospital protocol is a challenge, those suppliers and operators willing to provide training, textile management support and hands-on service can succeed in selling reusable surgical textiles to healthcare organizations. And perhaps the industry can begin to reverse the disposable trend of the past several decades.

October 30, 2012

CINCINNATI — Setting up a surgical pack room takes more than a little thought and planning

CINCINNATI — Setting up a surgical pack room for a healthcare laundry facility takes more than a little thought and planning. A recent webinar, sponsored by the Association for Linen Management, featured Jim Sprout, the pre-pack business manager for Standard Textile Co. in Cincinnati.

Sprout detailed the key elements in developing a successful pack room program, starting with what hospitals are looking for from service providers.

“What do they want from us? Cost savings, staff preference, environmental impact and a partnership,” says Sprout. Such a partnership, he says, is a key relationship, as is the partnership with the manufacturer that makes the towels, gowns and other linens for your healthcare facility.

OTHER KEY ELEMENTS

The other major elements in putting together a pack room program include the facility, the staff, the products to be provided, and a strong quality-assurance program.

Sprout says a textile manufacturer can provide invaluable information to a healthcare laundry.

“We know how to launder this (linen), we get all the testing, we develop the fabric, we register it with the government, and only we know how we washed it 75 times,” he says. “Whomever you buy any product from, you should base your laundry formula on what the manufacturer recommends.”

Always register products, Sprout encourages, and rely on the manufacturer for product support when anything goes wrong, as well as for program support.

Many manufacturers also can provide clinician support, including access to a nurse to help provide technical information and representation with a laundry’s clients.

“We think it is important if you want to be a partner with an OR (operating room staff) that you add some sort of clinical expertise available on your side.”

As for the facility, Standard Textile has developed a pack room layout that may prove helpful. Ask a number of questions, Sprout recommends, including the type of storage needed, whether your facility will be sterilizing or distributing packs, where offices, locker rooms, bathrooms and break rooms will be, where the quality assurance testing will be accomplished, and more.

The main requirements are proper air exchanges—no air venting from an area contained soiled linens, and clean air coming in; an ability to seal the pack room, and that the surfaces be cleanable.

Sprout says large light tables, 6 feet by 8 feet, with red lines to guide folding are also essential. Other considerations to take into account are shelving and reject bins, as well as a repair station.

Standard Textile’s approach to facility design, he says, is to have a large space, at least 140 to 160 square feet per worker. This enables the facility to have plenty of storage space—key to maintaining an efficient and orderly pack room—and lots of room to move about. But he also says it’s not good to have workers searching a pack room for materials.

“We prefer to have everything already sorted, already stacked, already organized so the workers who make the packs don’t have to do the search.” It’s best to have one person designated as the material handler, who takes away finished products and who brings in raw products, Sprout says.

His company’s approach also recommends keeping inspection, folding and pack-making functions all in the same area, and it suggests more formal and focused training for pack room workers.

Product selection is a key element to a proper pack room, Sprout says. Know the product’s performance characteristics, evaluate current and potential products, and continually review the products.

QUALITY ASSURANCE

A quality assurance program is a major element to consider, Sprout says. He listed 11 parts of a sound quality assurance program.

One, ensure that all items are folded the same. Engineers as well as OR nurses have designed folds for certain pieces of linen, such as surgical gowns. Two, inspect the materials, although perfection is not the goal, he says. The inspection criteria should be specific, documented, constantly reviewed and constantly adjusted. Three, know the age of the products being used. “We test our products to be sure they are good for 75 uses. … It’s not enough to just date it. … The simple way is to mark in red. Many places now use bar codes, and several even use RFID. Ours supports all three systems.”

No. 4 is accountability, Sprout says. A facility must be able to track every item and every pack back to the person who processed it: the inspector, the assembler, the sterile lot, etc. Next on the list is environment, meaning that the space and workers must be clean and that access is limited.

The sixth principle to a sound quality assurance program is item repair. The manufacturer will list recommendations for types of patches, placement of patches and the number of times an article, such as a gown, can be patched. “We think it is important to have repairs done only within fairly tight restrictions on methodology and types of repairs.”

Barrier testing is No. 7 on Sprout’s list of elements for quality assurance. While a brand-new product meets barrier expectations set by a manufacturer, a barrier can be compromised. “We believe barrier testing should be done on a regular basis. We think it is important that you monitor barrier performance on a daily basis.”

Pre-printed labels are best, Sprout says, to cover the eighth item on the list. Packs have to be labeled, he says, and they have to be labeled accurately. Sterilization is No. 9, and is a critical part of quality assurance, he says. Inventory management—knowing when materials levels are down and being able to order them before it hits a critical point—is imperative, he says. “You simply can’t run a pack room and wait until the workers come out and say, ‘We’re out of gowns,’ because then it’s too late. And users absolutely rely and depend on having those sterile packs where they need to be.”

The last item on Sprout’s list is complaint handling. A facility requires an easy method to communicate any issues that might arise. “We think the more information you get about any dissatisfaction that users have only strengthens your ability to be successful.”

WHAT HOSPITALS ARE LOOKING FOR

Sprout also touched on what hospitals are looking for from a provider of surgical packs. Primary is cost savings, and while this is important, Sprout says hospitals are often reluctant to provide information to allow a cost analysis. When talking about the cost savings of reusable linens vs. disposables, Sprout suggests sending a team that includes a clinician to the hospital to demonstrate the benefits.

Hospitals also are looking to make their staff happy, and studies have show that clinicians, including surgeons, prefer reusable gowns to disposables. Environmental impact is a growing concern for many healthcare facilities, and Sprout talked about a European study that shows reusable gowns cause only one-third to one-half the environmental damage caused by a disposable gown. The study points mainly to energy use, water consumption and regeneration of chemical carcinogens as the main factors to consider in the debate. The laundry process alone takes less water to wash a gown than a manufacturer uses to make a disposable gown, he says.

Other environmental studies have reached the same conclusion: the impact of using disposables is far worse than using a reusable product.

The other item that hospitals are looking for is a true partnership, Sprout says. This is where access to a clinician is so important for a pack room. “Not only Standard Textile, but other companies as well have clinical nurses available to help you with surgical linen issues, people who can represent you.” Communication is another point in a partnership, he says. The best accounts have committees that meet monthly or quarterly to discuss any surgical linen issues and keep improvements going on a continual basis.

OTHER FACTORS

Sprout touched on recent updates to the industry. First off is the change to OR towels. He touted the movement toward synthetic towels as a way to eliminate lint in operating rooms. Other changes are the improvement in monitoring of sterilization through biological indicators and the improvements in fabrics.

Unique device identifiers are on their way, Sprout says. “Every device you make, you need an identifier. In the long run, we’re going to have to bar-code or add RFID to pack labels.”

Lastly, Sprout mentioned sequential wrapping, which has changed the dual-wrapping and separate-wrapping procedures. With two-ply wrappers, a facility saves time and money, and Sprout says that “if there are pack rooms that wrap every single pack two completely separate times with two completely separate methods, that’s wasteful, and that’s an opportunity to cut back that time spent almost in half.”

Hospitals’ reluctance to change without a cost comparison is major. “The biggest hurdle is getting the cooperation of a hospital to turn over enough of their costing structure for disposables so that we can convince them that the savings we are projecting are reasonable, accurate, real and achievable.”

October 13, 2010

CHICAGO — As if our dicey economy isn’t enough for hoteliers to contend with, the bed bug—a longtime pest of the lodging industry—has made a resurgence in America.

Once virtually eradicated from the hospitality industry, the bed bug is back and showing up in even the most exclusive hotels and resorts, according to Ecolab, which has a Pest Elimination division and even offers a removal service specific to bed bugs.

August 13, 2010

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Healthcare-associated infections (HAI) strike 2 million Americans annually, killing 99,000—more people die from HAI than car accidents and homicides combined.

“The statistics are pretty brutal,” says Linda Homan, RN, CIC, a longtime infection-control professional who works for Ecolab Healthcare’s Clinical and Professional Services. “They really do speak for themselves.”

CHAIN OF INFECTION

July 30, 2010

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is making it easier to find chemical information online.

EPA has released a database, called ToxRefDB, which allows the interested public to search and download thousands of toxicity testing results on hundreds of chemicals.

July 13, 2010

CHICAGO — Do you keep your cool when things start to heat up at your laundry? Do even the smallest things eat at you, or does it take a major problem to make your temperature rise?

When American Laundry News presented a slew of pressure-inducing scenarios in its Wire survey in July, most respondents said their blood pressure holds steady or the issue at hand is rarely or never a concern. But there was one situation that had six out of 10 respondents admitting that it would make them at least a little nervous.

May 24, 2010

FLOSSMOOR, Ill. — John F. Dobrez Jr., 81, founder and former president of Illinois-based Dober Chemical Corp., died Tuesday at his home.

December 18, 2009

For months we’ve talked about what to do in case of an H1N1 flu pandemic. I’ve discussed the advisability of starting a reusable-isolation-gown policy to help control costs and provide a stable supply to hospitals if there were such a pandemic. Everyone thought this was a good idea but was unwilling to commit the organization.

October 9, 2009

“In your experience, what are or have been the most stubborn stains to remove? What tips can you offer those of us who must contend with these most difficult substances that find their way onto and into our textiles?”

Consulting: Tom Mara, Victor Kramer Co., Oceanport, N.J.

October 7, 2009

“In your experience, what are or have been the most stubborn stains to remove? What tips can you offer those of us who must contend with these most difficult substances that find their way onto and into our textiles?”

Textiles: Elizabeth Easter, Ph.D., University of Kentucky, Lexington, Ky.

July 7, 2009

ALBANY, N.Y. — The Occupational Safety & Health Administration (OSHA) has cited Morgan Linen Service, Menands, N.Y., for 21 alleged safety and health violations at its plant, the agency reports.

The textile rental service faces $47,600 in proposed fines following a programmed OSHA inspection initiated in February.

May 27, 2009

RICHMOND, Ky. — While healthcare management personnel grapple with their responses should the H1N1 (swine) flu impact their facilities, it’s business as usual for laundry directors and managers, according to the Association for Linen Management (ALM).

May 1, 2009

With news of the influenza A (H1N1) infection, AKA “swine flu,” spreading faster than the illness itself, it might be easy to overlook how prepared for pandemic flu the laundry industry might be. After a public scare over the avian flu, many hospitals and other healthcare facilities are better equipped for such an outbreak than public perception might indicate.

March 13, 2009

“MRSA is a four-letter ‘word’ no healthcare worker wants to hear. What exactly is it? How does it spread, and how can it affect my laundry operation? Does my staff need to take any special precautions? Should I be concerned about my workers unknowingly taking it home to their families?”

Equipment Manufacturing: Dan Goldman, Wascomat Laundry Equipment, Inwood, N.Y.

March 6, 2009

“MRSA is a four-letter ‘word’ no healthcare worker wants to hear. What exactly is it? How does it spread, and how can it affect my laundry operation? Does my staff need to take any special precautions? Should I be concerned about my workers unknowingly taking it home to their families?”

Textiles: Elizabeth Easter, Ph.D., University of Kentucky, Lexington, Ky.

April 4, 2008

An AmericanLaundryNews.com Exclusive

“Sometimes, we get so caught up in getting the work processed and to our customers that we don’t keep the laundry production areas as clean as they should be. What tasks should we be performing regularly to keep our facility clean? To what degree do we need to clean our equipment and how often?”

March 21, 2008

ATLANTA – The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is investigating as many as four more potential cases of laundry and housekeeping workers infected with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, as a result of needlestick injuries they suffered at work.
  

November 9, 2007

The infection-causing bacteria known as methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA, or “mer-sa” for short) has been a nemesis of infection control professionals (ICP) and healthcare laundry managers for decades. Now, it’s caught the public’s attention and is making headlines across the nation.

June 29, 2007

What measures can a laundry manager take to reduce the percentage of stain rewash found in their operation? How can they differentiate stains from soils? What do you consider an acceptable reject/rewash rate to be?

June 29, 2007

What measures can a laundry manager take to reduce the percentage of stain rewash found in their operation? How can they differentiate stains from soils? What do you consider an acceptable reject/rewash rate to be?

June 29, 2007

What measures can a laundry manager take to reduce the percentage of stain rewash found in their operation? How can they differentiate stains from soils? What do you consider an acceptable reject/rewash rate to be?

May 21, 2007

CHICAGO — Managing or overseeing an institutional, commercial or industrial laundry causes at least moderate stress, according to 91% of those responding to May’s Wire survey. And their stressors range from a co-worker (39.4%) to a customer or end user (18.2%) to any number of other variables, including the nature of their job (56%) and/or the volume of work (44%).

February 22, 2007

Prepared by the National Association of Institutional Linen Management (NAILM)

Jan. 18, 2007

Occupational Safety & Health Administration (OSHA)

    Emergency Preparedness and Response

December 7, 2006

A number of my customers have been asking if I have a response plan to a pandemic flu. While I’d been following the avian flu scare that has been circulating the globe, I had to admit that I hadn’t developed a specific “Pandemic Flu Response Policy.”

My first step in developing such a plan was to do a little research on the Internet. I started by visiting PandemicFlu.gov, a website managed by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and found the following material.