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Did You Know?

Did You Know?

 

Toilet Sneeze: Beware the Flush

 

"In many older toilets, water aerosolizes up to 20 feet from the center of the flush."

 

Philip M. Tierno, Jr, PhD, author of "The Secret Life of Germs"; Director, Clinical Microbiology & Immunology New York University Medical Center; Associate Professor, Departments of Microbiology & Pathology New York University School of Medicine.

Article

ICM Defined

 

By Allen Rathey

 

Integrated Cleaning and Measurement (ICM) is an open source unified-systems approach to institutional and industrial cleaning that uses measurement as a product and process selection, enhancement and validation tool. ICM is a trademark of Kaivac, but as an open-source platform, ICM is open to product and method substitution (e.g., non-Kaivac products and methods) based on outcome data. While the ICM approach in part incorporates a variety of scientific devices that measure microbial, particulate or other contaminant presence to evaluate cleanliness, a primary purpose of ICM is to create unification of elements and a holistic view of building environments, and to use measurement as a means to assess progress and track the benefits of synergies.

The open-source nature of ICM has garnered considerable interest from the cleaning industry as a whole, with several major trade publications and organizations calling attention to it:

•           Cleaning and Maintenance Management (CMM) - August 2008

•           International Facility Management Association (IFMA) - August 2008

•           Food Safety Magazine (FSM) – August / September 2008

•           International Executive Housekeepers Association (IEHA) – September 2008 (Executive Corner)

According to proponents, among the areas where ICM holds promise is in helping to reduce the number of hospital acquired infections (HAIs) as part of a multifaceted approach. Although the need for handwashing and behavior modification to encourage handwashing, aseptic surgical procedures, patient screening and other measures have been well-documented or advocated for, a major missing element - and one ICM directly impacts - is integrating the effective cleaning of environmental surfaces with measurement of outcomes, then incorporating that data in a multi-pronged, and continuously improved, intervention plan.

Since visual inspection for microbial contamination is ineffective, Adenosine Triphosphate or ATP detection devices as well as bacterial cultures are being utilized in healthcare facility measurement programs. ATP testing measures microscopic organic matter or bioburden on surfaces which itself may constitute microbial growth or may provide a food source for microbial growth.

According to the UK study titled “A modified ATP benchmark for evaluating the cleaning of some hospital environmental surfaces,” by Lewis T, Griffith C, Gallo M, Weinbren M:
“Visual inspection ... can be misleading…[and] calls have therefore been made for a more objective approach to assessing surface cleanliness ... ATP testing can be used to provide instant feedback on surface cleanliness, and was found to be a powerful way of demonstrating deficiencies in cleaning protocols and techniques to staff.”

ATP devices are often utilized in ICM programs for this reason.

Types of ICM Measurement

ATP, fungal enzyme, RODAC plate, Petrifilm, particle counter, airborne dust mass, infrared/moisture detection, and other device and measurement platforms are available as methods of microbial/particulate and other contaminant detection.

General ICM Testing Procedure


1. Measure. Use one or more measurement tools to determine which areas in the facility need to be cleaned most as well as how effective current cleaning methods are. This creates a baseline of current practices.
2. Compare. ICM establishes and provides benchmark data, based on scientific tests by participants. This data will be available through the KaiScience Web portal at www.KaiScience.com/ICM. The database will allow for comparison and improvement of cleaning practices.
3. Experiment. Facility managers will try new and varied forms of cleaning, disinfection, as well as integration of methods to determine what works best.
4. Implement. The experimenting phase completes when new effective methods have been determined, and in turn are put into regular practice, followed by additional measurement to establish a continuous improvement cycle.

For more information, visit www.KaiScience.com/ICM


 

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About Allen Rathey

A 25-year veteran in the housekeeping and cleaning industry, Allen Rathey began his career by establishing a home and commercial cleaning service in the early 1980s. After 10 years of first-hand experience, he transitioned from cleaning to consulting, providing advice and marketing services through his communications company, now InstructionLink/JanTrain, Inc. (ILJT). ILJT helps a wide range of cleaning industry organizations from start-up businesses to Fortune 500 companies, develop credible marketing messages, medical and scientific advisory boards, scientific communications and related outreach. The goal? Refine and validate products and processes to produce better and healthier indoor environments, then effectively deliver best practice information to the public.

Rathey's passion for educating the marketplace about the life-enhancing, health and other benefits of effective cleaning and housekeeping, prompted him to start The Housekeeping Channel in 2004. The Housekeeping Channel provides consumers with better, faster and healthier housekeeping tips and in-depth information. The Housekeeping Channel's portfolio of best practice advice comes from a range of leading professionals, including cleaning experts, professional executive housekeepers and professional cleaning services, scientists and doctors, environmental specialists and organizational and time-management consultants. More than 50,000 unique visitors go to the Housekeeping Channel each month, many spending more than an hour per visit.

Rathey is also the president of The Healthy House Institute, an online resource for a better, safer indoor environments.

Allen has been tapped as a housekeeping expert by The New York Times, U.S. News and World Report, BrandWeek Magazine, Real Simple, WebMD, and other national media. He has written articles for more than two-dozen international trade and consumer magazines.

 

 

 

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