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ICTalk: Infection Control Today Podcast

ICTalk: Infection Control Today Podcast

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ICTalk: Infection Control Today Podcast is a podcast that dives into the latest trends, challenges, and solutions in infection prevention and control. This podcast delivers expert insights, real-world strategies, and actionable advice, covering topics relevant to health care professionals at every level—from C-suite executives to infection preventionists, sterile processing, environmental hygiene staff, and more. Join us for conversations with leading infection preventionists, industry experts, and thought leaders as we explore how to create safer environments, improve outcomes, and navigate the evolving landscape of infection control. Ciencia
Episodios
  • 20: The Invisible Heroes: Why Dental Assistant Recognition Week Matters
    Mar 9 2026

    Every time you sit in a dental chair, you witness a carefully choreographed performance. The dentist guides the instrument. The hygienist checks your bite. Behind the scenes stands the dental assistant, orchestrating the invisible work that keeps you safe.

    "Dental assistants do more than just assist the doctor," says Sherrie Busby, EDDA, CDSO, CDIPC, dental assistant speaker and trainer, with 42 years of experience, and a member of the Infection Control Today® (ICT®) editorial advisory board. "We're responsible for setting up rooms, breaking down rooms, following the entire chain of infection control from start to finish."

    Most states require dental hygienists to earn degrees and complete specialized schooling. Dental assistants? In most states, you can work in infection control without any formal training. Many learn on the job, sometimes absorbing bad habits along with good ones.

    Yet dental assistants manage staggering responsibilities: sterilizing instruments, documenting visits, managing lab cases, maintaining infection control protocols, and providing patient education. In hospitals, these tasks are divided among specialized roles. In dental offices, one person does it all.

    The compensation doesn't match the responsibility. The median wage hovers around $20 per hour, with some states paying just $16 to 17. "It's sad that the person with the most duties in the practice is the lowest paid," Busby notes.

    The infection control stakes are particularly high. Dental settings involve constant exposure to aerosols and instruments. Proper PPE use, meticulous cleaning, and sterilization are non-negotiable. C. difficile bacteria can survive on surfaces for up to 5 months. Failure in any step compromises patient safety.

    The COVID-19 pandemic exposed this vulnerability. Dental professionals faced harm's way, yet compensation didn't reflect that risk or the essential work they perform.

    The Dental Assistant National Board is pushing for standardized credentialing and education requirements across states, a long-overdue shift ensuring consistency in infection control practices and knowledge.

    This Dental Assistant Appreciation Week, it's time to acknowledge what's been invisible too long. Dental assistants aren't just assistants. They're infection control specialists, patient educators, and safety guardians. They deserve recognition, fair wages, and professional standards reflecting the critical work they do every day. The magic you see in the dental chair? Behind every moment is a dental assistant making it happen.

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    53 m
  • 19: Contagious Conversations: The Bold New Series Tackling the Toughest Topics in Infection Prevention
    Feb 16 2026

    Contagious Conversations is a new video series by Infection Control Today® (ICT®) created to make space for the conversations infection preventionists (IPs) often avoid, not because they are unimportant, but because they are personal, complicated, and sometimes uncomfortable.

    In the premiere episode, the hosts, Isis Lamphier, MPH, MHA, CIC, AL-CIP; Heather Stoltzfus, MPH, RN, CIC; Brenna Doran, PhD, MA, ACC, CIC, AL-CIP; and Jill Holdsworth, MS, CIC, FAPIC, NREMT, CRCST, CHL, AL-CIP, introduce the series' purpose and set the tone for what is to come: honest dialogue about the profession, the people doing the work, and the pressure points shaping the future of infection prevention.

    The opening frames the problem clearly. “Infection preventionists are great about talking about pathogens, but we’re not so great at talking about ourselves,” said Stoltzfus. Doran added that the work can consume even the most resilient professionals, noting, “We spend so much time trying to manage the tasks of our job, but sometimes the most important work starts with a conversation.”

    Lamphier describes Contagious Conversations as an intentional space for those discussions that rarely happen in staff meetings and rarely make it into policy documents. “This series is our space to have those real human conversations,” she said, emphasizing that the goal is to “break down barriers, challenge assumptions, and remind us that we’re all still figuring it out.” The hosts reinforce that the series is not built around being right; it is built around being real. Stoltzfus underscores that approach by explaining, “These conversations aren’t about being right. They’re about being real.” A brief but memorable line from another panelist lands as the guiding theme. “Courage is contagious, and so are good conversations,” the hosts said.

    The first episode tackles a topic many infection preventionists say they are hearing everywhere but rarely address directly: what backgrounds belong in infection prevention, and how the profession is navigating tension around clinical and nonclinical career paths. Stoltzfus frames it as an issue that shows up across the workplace, from informal chats to formal processes. She calls it “a conversation that I keep hearing, that everybody’s having in hallways, in their direct messages and their meetings and human resources.” She also sets guardrails for the discussion, emphasizing that the series is not about taking sides but about creating space for curiosity, transparency, and psychological safety.

    Lamphier introduces her own path through public health, long-term care, and acute care leadership. She describes entering the field during the pandemic as both chaotic and catalytic, saying, “I graduated… during the pandemic,” and that the urgency of the moment accelerated opportunities and shifted hiring patterns in ways newer applicants may not experience today.

    Holdsworth, an IP with more than 16 years of experience, shares a different path, beginning with a master’s degree in exercise physiology and progressing into infection prevention. She recounts how discrimination can become more visible when you move from being the sole infection preventionist to being part of a larger team. “Once I became a member of a larger team… I really started seeing some of those discrimination-type things happening,” she said.

    Doran describes her pathway from clinical microbiology and teaching into public health epidemiology and infection prevention, along with the barriers she encountered in hiring systems that defaulted to nursing requirements. She remembers the repeated dead ends clearly. “I was not an eligible candidate because I wasn’t a nurse,” she said, describing how difficult it was to even apply to some positions. Together, the group begins mapping where the problem may actually sit, not just in individual bias, but in organizational structures and leadership assumptions that shape job postings, pay bands, and access to experience.

    By the end of the episode, the purpose of Contagious Conversations is clear. It is not a one-off discussion; it is a series designed to bring more voices into the room, including people from human resources, professional organizations, and training programs. The hosts also signal that future episodes will invite audience participation through surveys and feedback, with the goal of turning shared experience into shared solutions.

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    36 m
  • 18: HSPA President Arlene Bush on Throughput, Standards, and Why Sterile Processing Must Celebrate Wins in 2026
    Feb 11 2026
    Sterile processing is often discussed only when something goes wrong. A tray defect. A missing instrument. A delayed case. But in this wide-ranging conversation with Infection Control Today®(ICT®), Arlene Bush, CRCST, CER, CIS, CHL, SME, DSMD, CRMST, the current president of Healthcare Sterile Processing Association (HSPA), makes a different case for 2026. If the field wants retention, resilience, and safer outcomes, it must start recognizing what works and how often.Bush is nearing the end of her presidency, calling it “a true labor of love,” and reflecting on what she has learned from serving the association, working with industry partners, and supporting her chapter network. Even with only “a couple of more months” left in her term, she remains focused on momentum: expanding education, strengthening certification, and pushing leadership to recognize sterile processing as the high-skill patient safety discipline it is.A Global View of Sterile ProcessingBush recently attended the World Federation for Hospital Sterilisation Sciences Congress in Hong Kong, where she said it was valuable “to sit at the table with other industry leaders who have input on sterile processing globally.” What stood out was not just innovation, but how different the practice looks outside the US. “The US has the [Food and Drug Administration],” she said. “I think some people forget that.”She also pointed to rapid product evolution, including “new robotic stuff,” and “new shorter biologicals,” emphasizing how cycle times that were once “hours long are no longer so.” For sterile processing teams under constant pressure, getting time back matters, but Bush grounded the conversation in the core mission: “to deliver safe, sterile equipment to every patient every time.”The Case for Celebrating Throughput, Not Just DefectsOne of Bush’s biggest themes was morale, and how sterile processing measures itself. “No one talks about the 2000 trays you did last week,” when everything went right, she said. “They talk about the one tray that was [wrong].” Her goal for 2026 is to shift that mindset and make throughput visible.Bush described reviewing department totals and being surprised by the volume, even during the holidays. What mattered to her was not just the number of surgeries, but the instrumentation processed “with little to no defects.” Her challenge to leaders is practical: “It’s hard to change a number you can’t see.”Certification Growth, and Why Membership MattersBush highlighted growth in certification as a marker of the field’s professionalization. “We’re like 67,000 [or] 68,000 certificate holders,” she said, noting that about “28,000 are actual members.” She encouraged certificants to consider membership, pointing out that for “the extra $10” members can vote and access reduced pricing and benefits.She also previewed changes to certification requirements and urged technicians to follow HSPA town halls and podcasts for the most current updates. Her message was clear: Education is not optional in a field where standards, device design, and instructions for use (IFUs) are constantly changing.IFUs Must Be Achievable, and Staff Need Real AccessBush repeatedly returned to a point that other infection control and prevention personnel hear in different forms across the hospital: Policies and instructions only work if they can be followed. “It needs to be achievable,” she said. “It needs to be interpretable, and it needs to be effective.” When IFUs are unrealistic, she encouraged technicians to call manufacturers directly. “This is the way you wrote this IFU; it can’t work that way,” she said, adding that some vendors change and others refuse.She also underscored how access affects adherence, sharing her own experience as a late-night technician who “never got access to the [Association for the Advancement of Medical Instrumentation (AAMI)] standards book” because it was “behind the door in the supervisor’s office.” Her commitment now is access for all shifts: “Doesn’t matter if it’s 3 o’clock in the morning or 9 AM.”Rounding as Competency, Culture, and PreventionBush described rounding as one of the most effective tools leaders have to reinforce standard work, identify drift, and prepare staff for surveys. She gave concrete examples, from submersion decisions to rinse times to stopping when uncertain. “If you don’t know if it swims, don’t make it swim,” she said.She also coached staff on what to say when asked a question they cannot answer. “Please don’t say ‘I don’t know,’” she said. Instead, staff should point to where the information lives: IFUs, policy, bottle label, or a supervisor.However, Bush also reframed rounding as relationship-building rather than interrogation. Sometimes it is as simple as, “How was your weekend?” because approachability creates psychological safety. “That’s rounding,”...
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    1 h y 5 m
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