One needlestick injury can change a medical worker’s health forever. All dental and medical office staff are potentially at risk, so proper sharps and dental waste management is a potential
The EPA’s dental amalgam rule effective July 2020 requires most dental practices to have a compliant amalgam separator in place and follow amalgam recovery best management practices. Dental practices can
Did you know? HealthFirst is partnered with three major medical distributors including, Henry Schein, Inc., McKesson Medical-Surgical, Inc., and Medline Industries LP to extend its groundbreaking crash cart and emergency
The last thing a dental professional wants to worry about is fines and regulatory plans of correction regarding your dental waste. Here’s a quick primer in avoiding unnecessary hassle. Sharps,
Avoid Needlestick Injuries with Sharps Best Practices Every year at least 5.6 million American health care workers are at risk of occupational exposure to bloodborne pathogens. As a dental professional,
As a dental professional, you have a lot to worry about. The last thing you want to deal with is fines and regulatory plans of correction regarding your dental waste.
With nearly half of the U.S. population at risk, are you ready for a cardiac medical emergency in your facility? As the #1 cause of death in the United States,
Many dental offices must comply with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Dental Amalgam Rule. This includes installing an amalgam separator before the July 14, 2020 deadline. Is your practice ready?
Dental practices must manage multiple streams of waste, ranging from sharps to heavy metals such as lead and amalgam. Lack of compliance can mean fines and worse, so it’s worth
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