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In full transparency, the following press release was submitted to SOURCE media by the Senate President’s office. (stock photo)

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BOSTON – Today, June 9, the Massachusetts State Senate passed a bill that would require central service technicians who practice in Massachusetts hospitals to receive standardized certification through a nationally accredited organization. 

An Act regulating central service technicians, filed by Senator Mike Rush, would impact an estimated 1,800 technicians operating in hospitals throughout the state who are charged with the disassembling, cleaning and sanitization of medical tools and equipment used in surgery and other highly sensitive medical operations.

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“Patients undergoing internal surgery should have every assurance that their procedure will follow the best medical practices available, and doctors should have every assurance that the tools they are working with have been stored and properly cleaned,” said Senate President Karen E. Spilka (D-Ashland). “Central service technicians are critical in both regards. I want to thank Senator Rush and Chair Comerford for their attention to this issue.”

The bill now moves to the Massachusetts House of Representatives where it awaits further action.

“As a world leader in the healthcare industry, Massachusetts must maintain the highest standards of patient safety,” said Senator Mike Rush (D-West Roxbury).“I’m proud of the work my colleagues in the Senate and I have done today to protect the citizens of the Commonwealth as well as those who come from around the globe to seek treatment.”

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“Central service technicians play an unseen but vital role for patients undergoing surgery,” said Senator Jo Comerford (D-Northampton), Senate Chair of Joint Committee on Public Health. “They are responsible for ensuring that equipment and instruments used during surgical procedures are properly decontaminated, cleaned, inspected, and sterilized prior to patient use. Every day, thousands of Bay Staters rely on them doing their job with perfection. I’m pleased the Senate is advancing this bill, reported favorably by the Joint Committee on Public Health, to recognize their professional status.”

Central service technicians are responsible for ensuring that surgical instruments are safe and sanitary to protect patients from possible infection.

Currently, technicians are allowed to perform their duties with a high school diploma or general equivalency degree and without additional relevant training, despite being required to keep up to date with the latest practices for over 37,000 different surgical instruments.

The legislation follows multiple high-profile incidents throughout the state in which surgical tools used in operations on patients may have been improperly disinfected. Incidents like these put patients at great risk of potential infection and serious adverse health effects. 

The bill would require central service technicians to pass a national accredited exam and complete an annual continuing education curriculum.

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By editor

Susan Petroni is the former editor for SOURCE. She is the founder of the former news site, which as of May 1, 2023, is now a self-publishing community bulletin board. The website no longer has a journalist but a webmaster.