SATOWNS

November 13, 2009

AUTOCLAVES in SOUTH AFRICA

Autoclaves (MEDICAL WASTE SOLUTIONS)

 For Autoclaves in Africa and South Africa please visit

Autoclaves South Africa

An autoclave is a device to sterilize equipment and supplies by subjecting them to high pressure steam at 121° C or more. It was invented by Charles Chamberland in 1879,[1] although a precursor known as the steam digester was created by Denis Papin in 1679.

Contents [hide]
1 Uses
2 Air removal
3 Autoclaves in medicine
4 Autoclave quality assurance
5 See also
6 References
Uses
Autoclaves are widely used in microbiology, medicine, body piercing, veterinary science, dentistry and podiatry.

Typical loads include glassware, medical waste, utensils, animal cage bedding, and Lysogeny broth.[2]

A notable growing application of autoclaves is in the treatment and sterilization of waste, such as pathogenic hospital waste. Machines in this category largely operate under the same principles as the original autoclave in that they are able to neutralize potentially infectious agents by utilizing pressurized steam and superheated water. A new generation of waste converters is capable of achieving the same effect without any pressure vessels. To sterilize culture media, rubber material, gowns, dressing, gloves etc. It is particularly useful for materials which cannot withstand the higher temperature of hot air oven. For all glass syringes, hot air oven is a better sterilizing method.

Air removal
It is very important to ensure that all of the trapped air is removed, as hot air is very poor at achieving sterility. Steam at 134° C can achieve in 3 minutes the same sterility that hot air at 160° C takes two hours to achieve.[3] Methods of achieving air removal include:

Downward displacement (or gravity type) – As steam enters the chamber, it fills the upper areas as it is less dense than air. This compresses the air to the bottom, forcing it out through a drain. Often a temperature sensing device is placed in the drain. Only when air evacuation is complete should the discharge stop. Flow is usually controlled through the use of a steam trap or a solenoid valve, but bleed holes are sometimes used, often in conjunction with a solenoid valve. As the steam and air mix it is also possible to force out the mixture from locations in the chamber other than the bottom.

Steam pulsing – Air dilution by using a series of steam pulses, in which the chamber is alternately pressurized and then depressurized to near atmospheric pressure.

Vacuum pumps – Vacuum pumps to suck air or air/steam mixtures from the chamber.

Superatmospheric – This type of cycle uses a vacuum pump. It starts with a vacuum followed by a steam pulse and then a vacuum followed by a steam pulse. The number of pulses depends on the particular autoclave and cycle chosen.

Subatmospheric – Similar to superatmospheric cycles, but chamber pressure never exceeds atmospheric until they pressurize up to the sterilizing temperature.

[edit] Autoclaves in medicine

Stovetop autoclaves – the simplest of autoclavesA medical autoclave is a device that uses steam to sterilize equipment and other objects. This means that all bacteria, viruses, fungi, and spores are inactivated. However, prions, like those associated with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, may not be destroyed by autoclaving at the typical 134° C for 3 minutes or less common 121° C for 15 minutes. Also, some recently-discovered organisms, such as Strain 121, can survive at temperatures above 121° C.

Autoclaves are found in many medical settings and other places that need to ensure sterility of an object. Many procedures today use single-use items rather than sterilized, reusable items. This first happened with hypodermic needles, but today many surgical instruments (such as forceps, needle holders, and scalpel handles) are commonly single-use items rather than reusable. See waste autoclave.

Because damp heat is used, heat-labile products (such as some plastics) cannot be sterilized this way or they will melt. Some paper or other products that may be damaged by the steam must also be sterilized another way. In all autoclaves, items should always be separated to allow the steam to penetrate the load evenly.

Autoclaving is often used to sterilize medical waste prior to disposal in the standard municipal solid waste stream. This application has grown as an alternative to incineration due to environmental and health concerns raised by combustion byproducts from incinerators, especially from the small units which were commonly operated at individual hospitals. Incineration or a similar thermal oxidation process is still generally mandated for pathological waste and other very toxic and/or infectious medical wastes.

Autoclave quality assurance

The machine on the right is an autoclave used for processing substantial quantities of laboratory equipment prior to reuse, and infectious material prior to disposal. (The machine on the left and in the middle are washing machines)
Sterilization bags often have a “sterilization indicator mark” that typically darkens when the bag has been processed. Comparing the mark on an unprocessed bag (L) to a bag that has been properly cycled (R) will show an obvious visual difference.There are physical, chemical, and biological indicators that can be used to ensure an autoclave reaches the correct temperature for the correct amount of time.

Click here to find AUTOCLAVES in Africa 

Chemical indicators can be found on medical packaging and autoclave tape, and these change color once the correct conditions have been met. This color change indicates that the object inside the package, or under the tape, has been processed. Biological indicators contain spores of a heat-resistant bacterium, Geobacillus stearothermophilus. If the autoclave does not reach the right temperature, when incubated the spores will germinate, and their metabolism will change the color of a pH-sensitive chemical. Some physical indicators consist of an alloy designed to melt only after being subjected to the relevant holding time. If the alloy melts, the change will be visible.
Medi-Clave for Autoclaves in Africa and Southern Africa

Medi-Clave offers the widest range of autoclaves available in South Africa.

With a choice of:sliding door, manual hinge door & mechanicle hindge door configurations.

Sizes range from 100 litre
through to 7000 litre
capacities with a
choice of single door
or double door options.
With a choice of:
single door or
pass through door
configurations.

AUTOCLAVES AFRICA (MEDI-CLAVE)

It has always been our policy to re-invest significant amounts of our profits into product development and manufacturing systems and equipment. Medi-Clave autoclaves are manufactured using ultra modern equipment allowing us to quickly respond to our customers’s demands for high quality cost effective autoclaves. We aim to have close relations with the manufacturing of all components utilized, giving us close control over the quality and manufacturing processes. At Medi-Clave we pride ourselves on our ability to introduce new ideas and processes into the autoclave market. Where we lead, so often others follow…
Some computer-controlled autoclaves use an F0 (F-nought) value to control the sterilization cycle. F0 values are set as the number of minutes of equivalent sterilization at 121° C or 249° F (e.g: F0 = 15 min.). Since exact temperature control is difficult, the temperature is monitored, and the sterilization time adjusted accordingly.
Waste Autoclaves

A waste autoclave is a form of solid waste treatment that utilises heat, steam and pressure of an industrial autoclave in the processing of waste. Waste autoclaves process waste in batches. Saturated steam is pumped into the autoclave at temperatures around 160°C [1]. The pressure in the vessel is maintained at 5 bar gauge for a period of up to 45 minutes to allow the process to fully ‘cook’ the waste. The autoclave process gives a very high pathogen and virus kill rate.

Modern autoclaves, also referred to as converters, can operate in the atmospheric pressure range to achieve full sterilization of pathogenic waste. Super heating conditions and steam generation are achieved by variable pressure control, which cycles between ambient and negative pressure within the sterilization vessel. The advantage of this new approach is the elimination of complexities and dangers associated with operating pressure vessels.

MEDICAL WASTE SOLUTIONS

AUTOCLAVES SOUTH AFRICA 

 

 

Some of the Information above is found on the wikipedia website (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autoclave) You can also go there for more information

 

AUTOCLAVES AFRICA

September 17, 2009

Health Care

 Health Care – Medical Aid South Africa

From the perspective of an individual or Company which may already have a medical aid package in place, why not  incorporate the Day1Health package, together with a low cost medical aid and GAP cover? From a practical point of view you will have the free, unlimited Doctor’s and Dentist’s visits (and other benefits of Day1Health), but also a medical aid which wil pick up the costs of elective surgery.

Health Care

GAP cover provides hospitalization costs up to 300% of medical aid tariff, something your current package probably doesn’t do anyway. This way a member will also benefit from the cash payout of the Day1Health scheme even if the medical aid covered all the hospitalization costs, which is perfectly legit and we have found this arrangement will generally result in a saving of one third to fifty percent of the costs of your current medical aid.
 
• More and more working people cannot afford medical aid
 • The workforce is an employers greatest asset
 • Their health is a priority
 • The majority of working people in South Africa have no private health cover
 • Working people want access to private healthcare
 • Giving employees at least access to healthcare is an employers fundamental social responsibility.
 
As the Broker representing this unique package, you may contact Jozef Henning & Associates at:1. 011-908-2849
2. 082-447-8374
3. 086-694-6648. 
Please visit us at www.health-care.co.za to see the extent of the services we offer
Affordable Medical Aid & Hospital Plan

August 17, 2009

MEDICAL AID & HOSPITAL PLAN

A Medical Aid has to comply with legal requirements in terms of providing minimum benefits for hospitalization and so forth, while a really cheap medical aid barely offer any real time protection when compared to our hospital plan, which provides healthcare under an insured basis, which has different legal requirements as well as for example no specific minimum benefits.

CareCross linked Doctors, which are the prescribed health professionals as per the rules of our healthcare plan, are spread all over South Africa; you will find one or two of them in some the most far out flung corners of South Africa, providing valuable health care services to the community, which invariably includes our members.

Our Hospital Plan is geared to provide protection against the cost of hospitalization medical expenses; for example, someone suffers a heart attack, brain tumour etc and an additional R 9,000 per day will be paid, which many a cheap medical aid may not even pay
.
We aimed, from when this plan was first conceived, to offer a very real and practical hospital plan benefit package in stead of merely paying a few hundred rand paid for having been admitted and in that sense ended up with something better than many a cheap medical aid plan.
 
A medical aid is under no obligation, to provide the types of payment of hospital accounts following an accident. The Motor Vehicle Accident fund amendments now hardly compensate more than our hospital plan benefits and South Africans need to make sure that a cheap medical aid doesn’t end up leaving them exposed.

Upon permanent disability due to an accident, our hospital plan package will pay a benefit of up to R 250,000 for the main member, per incident irrespective of actual costs incurred, which many cheap medical aids will at best restrict to perhaps the cost at a Government hospital only.
 
Our hospital plan is not a Medical Aid, not even a cheap medical aid, but a Stated Benefit Insurance Hospital Plan. You still need to ensure that you have adequate protection for events such as heart attack, stroke, cancer, organ transplant etc, using life policy benefits, for example.

Our section 1 healthcare benefits include the cost of medication. Your GP or Dentist has to prescribe medication from the CareCross Medication Formulary which they are fully aware of. If they aren’t dispensing from their rooms you can get your medication at Medi-Kredit linked pharmacy, similar to most medical aid rules.

Carecross is not a hospital group but a Private Practitioner Network ONLY. With a DAY1 Hospital Plan you can go to any Hospital both Private or State but remember the Stated Benefits as described in our brochures will be paid to YOU, ie. you are responsible for settling the Hospital.

On our hospital plan you’re only covered in South Africa but if you have an accident or fall ill in one of the immediate neighboring countries (Swaziland, Lesotho, Botswana, Namibia, Mozambique or Zimbabwe) you have to get yourself to the nearest border post and ER24 will transport you to the most appropriate Hospital.

Membership of our hospital plan is restricted to healthy applicants up to age 55, unless by agreement (if you’re a little older, please do submit your application anyway and we’ll advise the outcome). Cover expires at the age of 65, unless by agreement and once again it will be considered relative to your state of health and claims history.

 

Head office contact numbers are 086 -111-3513; fax no 011-574-2834
VISIT OUR WEBSITE:   HEALTH CARE MEDICAL AID

August 13, 2009

Prevent Swine Flu

Filed under: Health, Health Products, Uncategorized — Ben @ 2:24 pm

Prevent SWINE FLU  (Varkgriep) , SINUSITUS, FLU etc

 Approved disinfectant to prevent Swine Flu

Green Building – Do your buildings create a healthy environment for their occupants?  The building industry is increasingly focused on making its buildings greener, which includes using healthier, less polluting and more resource-efficient practices. Indoor environmental quality (IEQ) refers to the quality of the air and environment inside buildings, based on pollutant concentrations and conditions that can affect the health, comfort and performance of occupants — including temperature, relative humidity, light, sound and other factors.  Good IEQ is an essential component of any building,
especially a green building.

ASK our staff about preventing Swine Flu and other virus as well as  bacterial infections.

Most people spend 90% of their time indoors

HVAC Systems are excellent breeding grounds for harmful airborne contaminants to gather and then spread throughout a building. When HVAC Systems are contaminated with dust, mold, construction debris, bacteria, or insulation fibers the indoor air quality of the facility suffers, putting patients at a higher risk in healthcare facilities, and damaging employee productivity for businesses. When the contaminants are combined with varying temperatures, humidity levels, and airflow in the HVAC System the indoor air environment can dramatically suffer. Not only are there additional health risk with a dirty HVAC System, but a system’s operating and efficacy standards are impaired, resulting in higher operating cost for the facility
Prevent contamination prevent SWINE FLU
Contact us now!

Pretoria
South Africa
    Telefax:      012 379 4856    
    Tel:           012 379 4857    
          
    Fax:           0866 926 553    
         
    Jackie :       084 711 9684     
    Vic:           076 055 11 63    

 

Visit our website  – Click here

 

VOORKOM VARKGRIEP – VOORKOM GRIEP en ander infeksies.

Powered by WordPress