By Susan Klacik
In recent years, there has been a shift in sterile processing. Previously, nearly all processing was performed in the same healthcare facility where the instrumentation was used. Recently, this trend is changing. For a variety of reasons, instrumentation used at a facility may be processed at an off-site location that is across campus, across town, or elsewhere. In the past, sterile processing departments
were located near surgery departments. However, this space is valuable and often needed for other
important uses, such as patient care procedures near surgery or to expand the surgical department.
Learning Objectives
- Describe the concerns related to shock and vibration during transport.
- Examine methods to maintain the integrity of sterile packages.
- Describe how to safely transport contaminated items.
About the Author
Susan Klacik is a Clinical Educator for The International Association of Healthcare Central Service Materiel Management (IAHCSMM). She is the IAHCSMM voting member for the Association of the Advancement of Medical Instrumentation (AAMI), a role she has held since 1997. A member of the Association of perioperative Registered Nurses (AORN) Guidance Advisory Board. Klacik has authored numerous articles and served as a contributing author to the IAHCSMM textbooks. She is the author of the IAHCSMM magazine’s column “Inside Washington” and the OR Manager column “Sterilization and Infection Prevention”. She has spoken domestically and internationally on sterile processing related subject matters as well as webinar presentations.

Critical Connections: Improving SP and OR Synergy
Sterilization Quality Control: Your Path to Protecting Your Patients
Ensuring Success: Become a Preceptor for Robotic Assisted Surgery Instruments in the Sterile Processing Department
Lost in Translation: Ethical Dilemmas in Medical Manufacturing Instructions
What Sterile Processing Should Know About Multidrug-Resistant Organisms (MDRO)
Making the Right Choice for Sterile Processing Consumable Stock Outages
UV-C Disinfection Technologies: How it works and what are the current applications for health care settings
The Differences Between Peracetic Acid High-level Disinfectants and Sterilants
The Mystery of Bowie & Dick: Alterations in the Vacuum on Your Sterilizer Throughout the Year
Meeting the Challenges of Endoscope Reprocessing and Documentation
Education Nation: Sterile Processing Quality Management Systems
Product testing: The overlooked 4th pillar of a robust sterilization process monitoring program
Importance of Water Quality for Medical Device Reprocessing
Mechanical Cleaning Safety: A Tale of Two Sides
Sterilization Choices for the SPD
When Is Disposable the Right Choice for SPD?
Education Nation: Sterile Processing Leadership Planning Sessions
How Safe Is Your Sink?
Sterile Processing Education – The balancing act between documentation and application
Moisture Absorption Devices….No This Is Not a Wet Pack Article
Positive Biological Indicators
Washer disinfector release for use after maintenance
Beyond the visual: The importance of quality cleaning verification programs
Education nation: Creating Sterile Processing Department SOPs
Cross out cross contamination in endoscope processing
What’s new in AAMI ST79:2017? A review
Healthcare soils 101: Identifying and removing them
Expiration dating in the SPD
The Science of Speed
The fantastic four: Sterile processing, operating room, quality and education
Ugh! Another wet pack. What’s a technician to do?
Sterilization quality control: Validation, routine monitoring go hand in hand
Manual cleaning – The critical human element
Water for cleaning medical devices
Can you afford to ignore obsolescence?
Automatic Equipment and Productivity in a Sterile Processing Department
External Transport of Medical Devices
Troubleshooting Washer-Disinfector Performance

