Interview
on every dentist’s agenda, however, it is becoming increas- ingly frustrating trying to tackle the maze of technical require- ments and more support rather than additional guidance is desperately needed.” Professor Smith thinks this situation has its roots, at least partly, in the education and training previously undertaken in UK dental schools. He added: “I don’t think
decontamination training has been very high up on the agenda for teaching student dentists or dental nurses in the past, so it is no wonder that the current technical requirements are proving challenging. “How can we expect people
to have compliant instrument decontamination processes in dental practice if they have never received the quality of training they need?” That is certainly not the case with students at the University of Glasgow’s Dental School which has one of the most up-to-date and fully equipped local decontamination unit training labs in Europe. This allows the 90 students
studying at the school each year to get hands on experience of the different decontamination technologies – something that never happened in the past – and understand the logistics of employing them in general dental practice. He added: “It doesn’t matter
if you have the best equipment available, if you don’t have the staff training or quality management systems in place then you won’t be able to main-
tain high standards in operating and managing the instrument decontamination process. “I believe education and
training is key to improvements in infection prevention and that’s why I’m delighted to be working with AESIC. This collaborative venture between industry and academia will help to make improvements in this area and help obtain more evidence to support instrument decontamination standards.” Prof Smith believes it is this
collaborative approach that has given Scotland a significant lead in developing high standards of infection control
parts of all healthcare workers in the NHS to respond to chal- lenges quickly and effectively as a group across Scotland. I served as a member of the Glennie Group for nearly a decade and it was inspiring to see the various groups and individuals working together as a real multi-organisational task- force with a cohesive approach – although I did witness a few heated debates!” Professor Smith’s work with
collaborators from the Health Protection Agency on the biol- ogy of prion disease in the oral cavity and instrument contam- ination has demonstrated the
“How can we expect people to have compliant instrument decontamination processes in dental practice if they have never received the quality of
training they need?” Professor Andrew Smith
in dentistry and other healthcare specialties. He explained: “Scotland has
taken the lead in Europe in obtaining an evidence base for change and improving surgical instrument decontamination practice because of the pro-active and collaborative approach it has taken to this issue which started with the Glennie Group in 2000.” Prof Smith, who served as a member of the group for nearly a decade, added: “There was a real willingness on the
potential for cross infection of variant CJD. He said: “Dental surgical
procedures continue to advance in complexity, especially in the field of implantology which increasingly resembles orthopaedic surgery. That is why there continues to be pressure for dental instrument decontamination processes to provide the same degree of sterility assurance as that found in other surgical specialities. “I’m excited by the work we
are embarking on with AESIC as it will provide us with an overview of the European standards and show us examples of good practice that can be more widely adopted. I hope this will help AESIC become the leading forum for promoting a European consensus on these issues. “Who knows, considering the
significant advances Scottish dentists have made in improving decontamination standards and our models of education and training, the rest of Europe might learn a thing or two from us.”
BIOGRAPHY
Professor Andrew Smith is one of the UK’s foremost experts on infection prevention and medical device decontamination. 1987: Qualified BDS from the University of Wales College of Medicine in 1987. 1988: Worked briefly in general dental practice in Bristol. 1993:PhD from Cardiff Dental Hospital. 1993: Lecturer in the Department of Adult Dental Care, Glasgow Dental Hospital 2000: MRCPath in Microbiology from the Royal College of
Pathologists. Promoted to Senior Lecturer in Microbiology and Honorary Consultant in Microbiology NHS Glasgow & Clyde. 2005: Head of the Diagnostic Oral
Microbiology laboratory and lead Microbiology Consultant for Decontamination in NHS Glasgow & Clyde. He is also co-author of two text books, several book chapters and over 90 peer-reviewed publications.
Research interests: Infection prevention (iatrogenic CJD from contaminated medical devices and the biology of prion proteins); Microbial virulence factors (evolution of pathogenic traits in the pneumococcus and its implications for pneumococcal vaccine design); Diagnostic Oral Microbiology (patho- genesis of oral mucosal infections).
He also sits on several local and national committee’s looking at decontamination of medical devices.
Scottish Dental magazine 31
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