WATER TREATMENT
www.heatingandventilating.net Legionella risk in dental practices
Dental practices, like all other healthcare premises, have a legal duty to provide safe care and treatment to patients and comply with Health and Safety law, writes Charlie Brain, senior consultant, Water Hygiene Centre
D
ental practices are typically supplied by the public mains water supply, which is used for handwashing, cleaning, decontamination and
drinking. The use of this water by staff and patients represents a risk of exposure to legionella bacteria, which must be managed.
Dentists and legionella guidance
The Health & Safety Executive’s (HSE) Approved Code of Practice (L8) provides advice on how to comply with legal duties under the Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974 (HSWA) and the Control of Substances Hazardous to Health Regulations 2002 (COSHH). Healthcare providers, such as dental practices, must also meet the Health and Social Care Act to prevent and control infection risks. Practical advice on managing water systems and
legionella bacteria is found in HSG 274 Parts 1–3. As healthcare premises, dental practices should also follow Department of Health (DoH) documents HTM04- 01: Safe Water in Healthcare Premises; and HTM01-05: Decontamination in Primary Care Dental Practices.
Management plans and governance
HTM01-05 states that Registered Managers have a duty of care under the HSWA. They must ensure water supply, storage and distribution comply with best practice guidance — namely HSE’s ACoP L8 and DoH’s HTM 04-01. In practice, dental practices should have: ¡ A legionella risk assessment ¡ A written scheme of control (operational plans, drawings, procedures and incident plans) ¡ A legionella training programme HTM04-01 (2016) also refers to water safety plans, detailed further in BS 8680:2020 Water Safety Plan – Code of Practice.
Legionella risk assessments
Risk assessments are a requirement of the above regulations, supported by ACoP L8 and HSG 274. BS 8580-1:2019 explains what should be considered in method and reporting. Findings must be informed by HTM04-01 and HTM01-05, and should examine: ¡ The current written scheme of control ¡ Eff ectiveness of implementation (management, training, plans) ¡ Water systems (cold water tanks, hot water, fi ttings, system design and operation) ¡ Dental equipment The recommendations form the basis of an action plan and updates to the written scheme.
26 October 2025
Left: Charlie Brain, senior consultant, Water Hygiene Centre
Dental equipment
Dental chairs include a water supply that can be aerosolised and expose patients and staff , so must be assessed. Water is supplied either from the building’s cold water system or self-contained bottles of distilled/reverse osmosis water. Dental unit water lines (DUWLs) use long, narrow tubing prone to biofi lm formation, where bacteria such as legionella and Pseudomonas aeruginosa can grow. This presents a risk when water is aerosolised or contacts wounds. Studies have shown dentists develop higher antibody levels compared to those unexposed. A fl ushing regime and maintenance reduce
biofi lm risk. HSG 274 Part 3 and HTM01-05 recommend:
TASK FREQUENCY
Drain down, clean, fl ush and disinfect all system components, pipework and bottles.
Twice daily [typically at the start and end of each working day]. Disinfectant contact times as recommended by the manufacturer.
Clean storage bottles,
ensure they are rinsed with distilled water or Reverse Osmosis [RO] water, then drain and leave inverted overnight.
CQC adds further advice: fl ush DUWLs 2–3 minutes at the start of sessions, 20–30 seconds between patients; isolate mains water with bottled systems; use only distilled/RO water; and never refi ll bottles with tap water. Confusion exists over whether bottles should be removed daily, as manufacturer advice varies.
Daily.
With some guidance now a decade old, practices must balance offi cial documents with up-to-date manufacturer instructions.
Microbiological monitoring
Routine microbiological testing of hot and cold- water systems is generally unnecessary, as systems are supplied with drinking-quality water. However, BS8558 recommends testing to check process effi cacy or water quality changes. Testing may be required during system commissioning, tank cleaning, or in response to concerns or clinical cases.
Legionella sampling within domestic systems is
only needed if water is stored, temperatures fall, treatment regimes fail, or if there is a suspected case. For dental equipment, HSG 274 and HTM01-05 say sampling is guided by the risk assessment. CQC advises testing only after problems such as taste or odour issues.
Summary
Dental practices must follow the same regulations as other buildings while also observing healthcare- specifi c HTMs. In addition to domestic systems, dental chairs and DUWLs create further risk, reinforcing the need for robust legionella risk assessments, written schemes of control and ongoing maintenance to protect patients and staff .
DOWNLOAD THE HVR APP NOW
Page 1 |
Page 2 |
Page 3 |
Page 4 |
Page 5 |
Page 6 |
Page 7 |
Page 8 |
Page 9 |
Page 10 |
Page 11 |
Page 12 |
Page 13 |
Page 14 |
Page 15 |
Page 16 |
Page 17 |
Page 18 |
Page 19 |
Page 20 |
Page 21 |
Page 22 |
Page 23 |
Page 24 |
Page 25 |
Page 26 |
Page 27 |
Page 28 |
Page 29 |
Page 30 |
Page 31 |
Page 32