Environmental Surfaces

Science-based Solutions for Environmental Cleaning Monitoring

Patients have a 50% chance of contracting a multi-drug resistant organism (MDRO) if the patient room is not properly cleaned.1 The patient care environment is full of high-touch surfaces: bed rails, tables, switches, buttons, and frequently used mobile equipment. It has been clinically proven that cross-contamination from these environmental surfaces is significantly decreased with improved cleaning.2

ATP monitoring of high-touch surfaces in hospitals and facilities can be an integral tool in environmental cleaning monitoring programs. The Neogen® Clean-Trace® ATP Cleaning Monitoring System offers a rapid cleaning efficiency monitoring tool that measures cleanliness of environmental surfaces, providing peace of mind.

Explore the Clean-Trace ATP Cleaning and Monitoring System for Healthcare

Luminometer LX25

The Clean-Trace Luminometer LX25 is accurate, consistent, and user-friendly.

The design of the Clean-Trace Luminometer LX25 was based on user feedback and features easy-to-use functionality, a color touchscreen, and a modern ergonomic design. Whenever a reading is generated on the Clean-Trace Luminometer LX25 in your facility, the data is captured, transmitted wirelessly (when Wi-Fi enabled), and uploaded directly for analysis. No transcription is required.

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Quality Control Data Manager

Quality Control Data Manager turns data into valuable information to help improve cleaning practices.

Meet the database portion of the Clean-Trace ATP Monitoring System—the Quality Control Data Manager, or QCDM. It’s an online, hosted service that allows you to review and manage your cleaning test data. Instead of relying on guesswork, you can easily (and quickly) identify weak spots, problem areas, and trends—improving and streamlining your entire cleaning monitoring practice.

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Footnotes

  1. Otter J.A., Jezli S., Salkeld J.A., et al. Evidence that contaminated surfaces contribute to the transmission of hospital pathogens and an overview of strategies to address contaminated surfaces in hospital settings. American Journal of Infection Control 2013. 41(5 Supplement):S6-11.
  2. J.A. Otter et al. “The role played by contaminated surfaces in the transmission of nosocomial pathogens,” Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology 32, no. 7 (2011): 687-699.