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Managing Cross-Infection Control in a Dental Setup

  • Writer: Dr. Divij Khullar
    Dr. Divij Khullar
  • Dec 31, 2025
  • 1 min read
Infection control

Infection control is the backbone of safe dental practice. A single lapse can compromise patient and clinician safety. Students seeking dental courses in Delhi NCR must prioritise strict infection control protocols.


Why Infection Control Matters

Dental procedures generate aerosols, droplets, and direct contact with saliva and blood. Without proper protocols, cross-contamination becomes a significant risk.



Core Components of Infection Control


1. Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)

Includes gloves, masks, eyewear, face shields, and gowns.


2. Sterilisation of Instruments

Autoclaving ensures complete microbial elimination.


3. Surface Disinfection

Regular cleaning of dental chairs, trays, and high-touch areas prevents microbial spread.


4. Waste Segregation

Proper disposal of sharps, contaminated waste, and chemical materials is mandatory.


5. Hand Hygiene

One of the most effective infection-prevention measures.


6. Clinical Asepsis During Procedures

Use of rubber dam, high-volume suction, and proper instrument handling reduces contamination.


Common Mistakes Students Make

  • Using the same gloves to touch multiple surfaces

  • Mismanaging sharps

  • Inadequate sterilisation cycle documentation

  • Forgetting pre-procedural mouth rinses


Importance of Training

At Dr Khullar’s Dental Academy, infection control is taught through structured demonstrations and practical sessions as part of comprehensive dental courses in Delhi NCR.


Conclusion

Cross-infection control protects everyone in the dental environment. Proper training and adherence to guidelines ensure safer clinical practice for interns and professionals alike.

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