Re: COVID19: Instrument cleaning protocols: Recommendations by German BioImaging

Posted by Nadine Utz on
URL: http://confocal-microscopy-list.275.s1.nabble.com/COVID19-Instrument-cleaning-protocols-tp7590586p7590643.html

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Dear all,

Core Facility Managers, who attended the "Trends in Microscopy - German
BioImaging Spring School" last week, held last Friday a spontaneous
workshop to discuss precautions of imaging core facilities to prevent
COVID19 infection of staff and users. The outcome of this workshop has
been summarized in recommendations by German BioImaging. I could not
include an attachment to this email and therefor uploaded the document
to this web site:

https://www.gerbi-gmb.de/Corona

I would like to express my sincere thanks to the participants of the
workshop:

Steffen Dietzel, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
Hans Fried, German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE) in Bonn
Angela Naumann, University of Freiburg
Roland Nitschke, University of Freiburg
Pawel Pasierbeck, IMBA Institute of Molecular Biotechnology in Vienna
Britta Schroth-Diez, MPI of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics
Martin Stoeckl, University of Konstanz
Stefan Terjung, European Molecular Biology Laboratory in Heidelberg
Roland Thuenauer, Centre for Structural Systems Biology in Hamburg
Silke Tulok, Technical University of Dresden

Workshop discussions were mainly based on:
- this confocal mailing list discussion
- recommendations by the World Health Organization
- recommendations by the Robert Koch Institute (German federal
government agency and research institute responsible for disease control
and prevention)

Best wishes
Nadine

--
Dr. Nadine Utz
Managing Director

German BioImaging - Gesellschaft für Mikroskopie und Bildanalyse e.V.
German BioImaging - Society for Microscopy and Image Analysis c/o University of Konstanz
Box 604
78457 Konstanz, Germany
Phone +49 7531 885337
[hidden email]
http://www.gerbi-gmb.de


Am 16.03.20 um 20:01 schrieb Martin Wessendorf:

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>
> Dear Dave--
>
> With regard to viability, the half-life of the virus on stainless steel was
> 13 hours and on polypropylene was 16 hours.  So yes, decontamination at the
> end of the day appears to be a good idea.
>
> https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.03.09.20033217v1.full.pdf
>
> Martin
>
>
> On Mon, Mar 16, 2020 at 5:44 AM Dave Johnston <[hidden email]> wrote:
>
>> *****
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>> http://lists.umn.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A0=confocalmicroscopy
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>> *****
>>
>> I'm with Andreas on this, there may be asymptomatic carriers out there
>> (including unit staff), we just don't know, so have to assume the potential
>> that any part of the scopes that get any human contact could be
>> contaminated, and we consider the scopes and most other ancillary
>> instruments to effectively be impossible to decontaminate without risk of
>> damage, hence fresh gloves on entering the unit, that can be sprayed with
>> 70% ethanol on regular basis, prevents you contaminating or being
>> contaminated. We have confocals, TEMs, SEMs, slide scanners and analysis
>> PCs to name a few and are based in a large teaching hospital site, so are
>> also thinking about trying to encourage remote access to analysis PCs to
>> minimise footfall and movement around the unit and wider site. That being
>> said, have yet to convince the boss to adopt those policies.
>>
>> On the plus side, given reported viability on surfaces, a first thing in
>> the morning clean and last thing at night clean may be unnecessary as if
>> any virus at end of day lock up, will be inactive by morning? Between user
>> cleaning may be best but we can have several dozen users in at any one time
>> moving between instruments and don't want to give them access to spray
>> bottles!!!!!
>>
>> Dave Johnston, Biomedical Imaging, Southampton.
>>