Cleaning the Practice
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Cleaning the Practice

Policy

We clean our practice facility safely and effectively to keep our environment free of antimicrobial-resistant organisms.

Cleaning and laundry services comply with NZS 8134:2021 Ngā Paerewa Health and disability services standard.

Scheduled cleaning takes place at regular intervals and is documented in our practice cleaning schedule.

We have a contracted professional cleaner who cleans the practice regularly. The cleaner understands how their role contributes to infection prevention and control, and knows when and how to clean our surfaces and equipment.

The practice team also carry out opportunistic cleaning when needed, for example, if a surface becomes noticeably soiled, or a blood or body fluid spill occurs.

We assess the risk of contamination for each surface and follow best practice to determine how and when they must be cleaned.

Cleaning different surfaces

Surfaces with frequent traffic or body contact are cleaned most frequently:

Carpets and soft furnishings

Hard surfaces

High-touch surfaces

Items in the waiting room

Walls, blinds, and curtains

Use of cleaning products and equipment

Cleaning products and equipment are a potential source of cross contamination. Follow best-practice processes for using and maintaining cleaning equipment:

Buckets

Cleaning cloths

Cleaning solutions

Mop heads

Vacuum cleaner

Cleaning blood and body fluid spills

Treat all spills as potentially infectious and clean immediately:

Follow the procedure in Blood and Body Fluid Exposure if an exposure happens during cleaning of the spill.

Consider having a designated spill kit to quickly manage blood and body fluid contamination.

The method for cleaning the spill depends on the volume and where it happens, e.g. hard surfaces or textiles:

Small spills (less than 10 cm diameter)

Large spills (more than 10 cm diameter)

Quarantine the spill area until surfaces are clean and dry.

Dispose of all contaminated cleaning items as infectious waste, e.g. absorbent material, cloths, paper towels, and PPE.

This page was reviewed with input from Ruth Barratt, Infection Prevention & Control and Quality Advisor (PhD, MAdvPrac (Hons), RN, CICP-E).

Related policies

Blood and Body Fluid Exposure

Standard Precautions

Waste Management

Practice cleaning schedule

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Topic type Core content
Approved By: Key Contact
Topic ID: 13795

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