Sterile Box Offers Safer Surgeries

Rice team's mobile container can sterilize surgical instruments in low-resource settings

Written byRice University
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(HOUSTON, TX)—Rice University students and their mentors have created a sterilization station for surgical instruments that can help minimize risk of infections to patients anywhere in the world.

The station built into a standard 20-foot steel shipping container houses all the equipment necessary to prepare surgical instruments for safe reuse, including a water system for decontamination and a solar-powered autoclave for steam sterilization. Autoclaves are standard in modern hospitals but badly needed in low-resource settings.

After months of design and construction, Douglas Schuler, an associate professor of business and public policy in Rice's Jones Graduate School of Business, and his team published an article in the open-access journal PLoS ONE detailing trials to validate what they call the Sterile Box.

Related Article: Sterilizing Safely

They reported the system's performance was nearly perfect over 61 trials in 2015 to sterilize and prepare a set of instruments for return to the operating room.

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