LAW/COMMUNICATION/SHARPS/DECONTAMINATION Flashcards

1
Q

What is the function of the GDC?

A

Protect patient safety and maintain public confidence in dental service

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2
Q

Who are the three categories in the register for the GDC?

A

Dentist, dental care professionals and specialist.

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3
Q

Registration for dentists runs on a calendar year basis, when must you pay the fee by to be on the register?

A

31st of December each year.

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4
Q

What are the three things that you must do be placed on the dental register?

A
  1. Pay the fee before 31st of December
  2. Declare enhanced CPD hours
  3. Fill in an indemnity declaration
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5
Q

Written consent form is not the actual valid consent itself. It is simply evidence that an attempt at consent has been undertaken. What Anaesthesia procedure do you need written consent to perform?

A

General anaesthesia.

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6
Q

Offering your arm for blood samples, is an example of which type of consent?

A

Implied consent.

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7
Q

At which age in Scotland is age of legal capacity?

A

16

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8
Q

Buckman proposes the communication protocol?To break bad news

A

spikes

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9
Q

What does spikes stand for?

A

S – setting and listening skills

P – patients’ perception of condition and seriousness

I – invitation from the patient to give information

K – knowledge, giving the facts

E – explore emotions and empathise as patient responds

S – strategy and summary

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10
Q

Goal setting can be tailored in to two groups, what are they?

A

Armpits

A – Appropriate

R – Realistic

M – Measurable

P – Positive

I – Important

T – Time – related

S – Specific

Smart

S – Specific

M – Measurable

A – Attainable

R – Relevant

T - Time-bound

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11
Q

Aggression is said to exist in two forms, what are they?

A

Active aggression and passive aggression

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12
Q

What are the four forms of passive aggression?

A
  1. Sulking
  2. Withdrawing
  3. Being stubborn
  4. Being resentful
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13
Q

Injuries from needles, instruments, bone fragments, or bites which break or penetrate the skin is known as a?

A

percutaneous injury (sharps injury)

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14
Q

A significant exposure is one where the source is known to be?

A

BBV infected

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15
Q

An injury with a non-contaminated sharps, is not classified as a significant exposure but should it still be reported?

A

Yes

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16
Q

What qualifies as a sharp in the dental setting?

A
  1. Needles
  2. Human teeth
  3. Bone fragments
  4. Instruments
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17
Q

The transmission of infection depends on a number of factors, including?

A
  1. The persons natural immune system
  2. The depth of the injury
  3. The type of sharp used e.g. hollow/solid bore
  4. Where the sharp enters the body
  5. If the source, if known, has BBV
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18
Q

Which BBV has the greatest risk of transmission?

A

Hepatitis B (1 in 3)

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19
Q

Which BBV has the second greatest risk of transmission?

A

Hepatitis C 1 in 30

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20
Q

Is there a vaccination against Hep C?

A

No

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21
Q

Which BBV has the least risk of transmission?

A

HIV 1 in 300

22
Q
  • All medical devices used on patients = contaminated
  • Decontamination/reprocessing = cleaning, rinsing, disinfection, drying, inspection, and sterilisation
  • The above will make contaminated products safe to re-use.
A
23
Q

Reprocessing RMD’s

  • Complex multistage process
A
24
Q

Disinfection and sterilisation

  • Disinfection: a process which eliminates many pathogenic microorganisms (except bacterial spores)
  • Sterilisation: a process that removes or kills all forms of microbial life
  • An instrument is sterile = theoretical probability of a viable microorganism being present in or on a device following a validated sterilisation process is less than one in a million.
A
25
Q

What is the most resistance microorganism to disinfect and sterilise?

A
  1. Prions
  2. Bacterial spores
  3. Mycobacteria
  4. Small non-enveloped viruses
  5. Gram-negative bacteria
  6. Fungi
  7. Large non-enveloped viruses
  8. Gram-positive bacteria
  9. Lipid enveloped viruses
26
Q

What must be done before buying an equipment?

A

Check the manufacturers decontamination instructions, so that you know whether they can be decontaminated by the facilities present.

27
Q

What symbol is indicated for single use instruments

A

= circle with the number 2 crossed out.

28
Q

What happens if you use a single use device twice =

A

if you reprocess a single use device you become legally liable if the product fails. You also take the manufactures liability.

29
Q

Preference should be given to instruments that can be sterilised through which method and why =

A

Give preference to instruments that can be cleaned using an ultrasonic bath or a washer-disinfector as these are automated processes which can be validated. This method includes a thermal disinfection and drying stage.

30
Q

Staff working in a local decontamination unit must be vaccinated for what =

A

hep B

31
Q

COSHH (control of substances hazardous to health) is the law that requires employers to control substances that are hazardous to health.

A
32
Q

Two sinks desirable for a local decontamination unit

A
33
Q

What does a dental handpiece lubricator do

A

= prolong handpiece

34
Q

Manual cleaning = increase sharps injury, cannot also be validated.

A
35
Q

What does fairy liquid do to proteins

A

= make proteins stick to the instruments.

36
Q

At what temperature should the water not exceed to and why not? =

A

water temp should remain at 30-35, should not exceed 45. Prion proteins start to coagulate at 45 making it more difficult to clean instruments.

37
Q

Ultrasonic cleaning uses high frequency sound waves, transmitted through a liquid medium. These sound waves create an activity in the liquid called cavitation. This occurs as the sound waves pass through the liquid, causing the formation of microscopic bubbles which are forced to expand. Once they reach a size where they can no longer support they implode. The cavitational process creates a scrubbing effect within in the liquid which gently agitates any debris off the surface of any instrument immersed in the tank.

A
38
Q

Fill the ultrasonic cleaner tank with cleaning solution Run the first cycle without any instruments to de-gas the solution on start up and on subsequent re fills. Ensure that joints and hinges are opened fully and instruments that need taking apart are fully disassembled before they are immersed in the solution.

A
39
Q

Place instruments in a suspended basket, ensuring that they are not overloaded or overlapped as this will prevent the solution contacting all surfaces of the instruments which will result in poor cleaning and can also cause wear to the instruments.

A
40
Q

Do not place instruments on the floor of the ultrasonic cleaner as excessive instrument movement can damage to them. To avoid damage to delicate instruments a modified basket might be necessary. Remember handpieces cannot be cleaned in an ultrasonic bath

A
41
Q

Submerge the baskets, close the lid and do not open until the cycle is complete. Select cycle setting for the validated cleaning procedure ensuring that temperature is not above 40°C.

A
42
Q

After the cycle is complete, drain the basket of instruments before rinsing. Each cycle must be recorded as satisfactory, sign and retain print outs.

A
43
Q

The solution must be changed when it becomes visibly contaminated or otherwise every 4 hours because the build-up of debris will reduce the effectiveness of cleaning.

A
44
Q

Keep a record of each change of solution. Rinse out the tank after emptying the solution to remove any soil before refilling. Drain, clean with a neutral solution, rinse and dry the cleaner when not in use and overnight.

A
45
Q

Ultrasonic cleaner testing

  • Foil Ablation Test – determines the pattern of erosion on aluminium foil strips suspended in the cleaner
  • Cleaning Efficacy Test – determines if the ultrasonic is functioning correctly by checking if any residual proteins are left on the instruments
  • Soil Test – involves removal of artificial soil from a test device
A
46
Q

After the cleaning process either manually or using an ultrasonic cleaner, all instruments must be dried thoroughly.

A
47
Q

Do not allow instruments to air dry as this can enable moisture to get trapped and also promote microbial growth and corrosion.

A
48
Q

Dry with low-linting towels to reduce any cloth fibres from sticking to the instruments which can increase risk of contamination. Make sure all instruments are fully dried before packaging or prior to sterilisation as any moisture will inhibit steam from contacting all surfaces

A
49
Q

Washer-disinfector

Using a WD requires several resources including staff training, space, compatible instruments and cassettes. You need to ensure that you have sufficient quantity of instruments as the process takes much longer. It needs to be installed and validated on site prior to use by an engineer. It needs regular testing and maintenance.

A
50
Q

Using a washer-disinfector is the preferred method for cleaning dental instruments because it offers the best option for the control and reproducibility of cleaning, and the cleaning process can be validated. WDs are used to carry out the processes of cleaning and disinfection consecutively. There are two methods of disinfection. Thermal being the preferred method as Chemical disinfection has disadvantages such as toxic reactions.

A
51
Q

Washer-disinfector

5 stages in the WD stage

  1. Flush
  2. Wash
  3. Rinse
  4. Thermal disinfection 80 degrees for 10 minutes 90 degrees for 1 min
  5. Drying
A
52
Q
A