Reprocessing and reuse of urological armamentarium: How correct are we!

Healthcare is expensive for a large proportion of the population in spite of high per capita income and good health insurance penetration. In an effort to reduce cost of the procedure, reprocessing of devices was started in the late 1970s. Reprocessing practice includes various measures such as prop...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Krutik Vipulbhai Raval, Rajeev Chaudhari, Shahil Rameshbhai Khant, Omkar Joglekar, Dipen Patel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2017-01-01
Series:Urology Annals
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.urologyannals.com/article.asp?issn=0974-7796;year=2017;volume=9;issue=2;spage=117;epage=124;aulast=Raval
id doaj-52a6694fc3144342834802b9a021cd9e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-52a6694fc3144342834802b9a021cd9e2020-11-24T22:16:07ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsUrology Annals0974-77960974-78342017-01-019211712410.4103/UA.UA_167_16Reprocessing and reuse of urological armamentarium: How correct are we!Krutik Vipulbhai RavalRajeev ChaudhariShahil Rameshbhai KhantOmkar JoglekarDipen PatelHealthcare is expensive for a large proportion of the population in spite of high per capita income and good health insurance penetration. In an effort to reduce cost of the procedure, reprocessing of devices was started in the late 1970s. Reprocessing practice includes various measures such as proper cleaning, disinfection, and sterilization procedures. As reprocessing is aimed at reducing cost, there is a potential risk of compromising patient safety due to cross contamination after inadequate sterilization. There is also risk of performance alteration of urological reprocessed devices during sterilization/disinfection processing. Therefore, there is a need for formulating proper guidelines to decide methods of reprocessing for various urological equipment. There is also need to discuss the problematic areas that urologists face and to find their solutions. A PubMed search was made in September 2016, using key words “reprocessing of medical devices,” “Single Use Devices,” “methods of reprocessing of devices in clinical practice,” “use of formalin chamber,” “urological disposable sterilization,” etc., After excluding duplicates, all English articles were reviewed by title and abstract. Full texts of selected articles were obtained, and these articles were cross-referenced to find any other related articles. All the articles were reviewed. A product can be reused if it can be economically reprocessed with validated protocols with preservation of its function. There is no reason to discard it after one use. This practice is useful for controlling economics of a urological case and to reduce the financial burden. Current Food and Drug Administration guidelines are stringent. The contamination described to test the sterilization process in the suggested guidelines actually does never exist in clinical practice. Therefore, new guidelines considering the clinical practice scenario are desirable.http://www.urologyannals.com/article.asp?issn=0974-7796;year=2017;volume=9;issue=2;spage=117;epage=124;aulast=RavalReprocessingsterilizationurological devices
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Krutik Vipulbhai Raval
Rajeev Chaudhari
Shahil Rameshbhai Khant
Omkar Joglekar
Dipen Patel
spellingShingle Krutik Vipulbhai Raval
Rajeev Chaudhari
Shahil Rameshbhai Khant
Omkar Joglekar
Dipen Patel
Reprocessing and reuse of urological armamentarium: How correct are we!
Urology Annals
Reprocessing
sterilization
urological devices
author_facet Krutik Vipulbhai Raval
Rajeev Chaudhari
Shahil Rameshbhai Khant
Omkar Joglekar
Dipen Patel
author_sort Krutik Vipulbhai Raval
title Reprocessing and reuse of urological armamentarium: How correct are we!
title_short Reprocessing and reuse of urological armamentarium: How correct are we!
title_full Reprocessing and reuse of urological armamentarium: How correct are we!
title_fullStr Reprocessing and reuse of urological armamentarium: How correct are we!
title_full_unstemmed Reprocessing and reuse of urological armamentarium: How correct are we!
title_sort reprocessing and reuse of urological armamentarium: how correct are we!
publisher Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
series Urology Annals
issn 0974-7796
0974-7834
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Healthcare is expensive for a large proportion of the population in spite of high per capita income and good health insurance penetration. In an effort to reduce cost of the procedure, reprocessing of devices was started in the late 1970s. Reprocessing practice includes various measures such as proper cleaning, disinfection, and sterilization procedures. As reprocessing is aimed at reducing cost, there is a potential risk of compromising patient safety due to cross contamination after inadequate sterilization. There is also risk of performance alteration of urological reprocessed devices during sterilization/disinfection processing. Therefore, there is a need for formulating proper guidelines to decide methods of reprocessing for various urological equipment. There is also need to discuss the problematic areas that urologists face and to find their solutions. A PubMed search was made in September 2016, using key words “reprocessing of medical devices,” “Single Use Devices,” “methods of reprocessing of devices in clinical practice,” “use of formalin chamber,” “urological disposable sterilization,” etc., After excluding duplicates, all English articles were reviewed by title and abstract. Full texts of selected articles were obtained, and these articles were cross-referenced to find any other related articles. All the articles were reviewed. A product can be reused if it can be economically reprocessed with validated protocols with preservation of its function. There is no reason to discard it after one use. This practice is useful for controlling economics of a urological case and to reduce the financial burden. Current Food and Drug Administration guidelines are stringent. The contamination described to test the sterilization process in the suggested guidelines actually does never exist in clinical practice. Therefore, new guidelines considering the clinical practice scenario are desirable.
topic Reprocessing
sterilization
urological devices
url http://www.urologyannals.com/article.asp?issn=0974-7796;year=2017;volume=9;issue=2;spage=117;epage=124;aulast=Raval
work_keys_str_mv AT krutikvipulbhairaval reprocessingandreuseofurologicalarmamentariumhowcorrectarewe
AT rajeevchaudhari reprocessingandreuseofurologicalarmamentariumhowcorrectarewe
AT shahilrameshbhaikhant reprocessingandreuseofurologicalarmamentariumhowcorrectarewe
AT omkarjoglekar reprocessingandreuseofurologicalarmamentariumhowcorrectarewe
AT dipenpatel reprocessingandreuseofurologicalarmamentariumhowcorrectarewe
_version_ 1725791187140345856