HFMED Optimizes Detachable Accessory Structure To Improve Post-Operative Cleaning, Disinfection And Maintenance Convenience

Jun 25, 2026 Leave a message

June 25, 2026 – Post-operative cleaning and disinfection is a key link in operating room infection control. Traditional surgical equipment accessories such as lamp handles, protective covers and limit baffles adopt fixed integrated installation structures. The gaps and dead corners of fixed structures are easy to accumulate blood stains, disinfectant residues and dust. Manual wiping is difficult to clean thoroughly, resulting in hidden bacterial residues. Meanwhile, non-detachable structures bring inconvenience to daily maintenance and parts replacement, increasing hospital equipment maintenance time and labor costs.

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To optimize the operating room post-operative infection control process and reduce maintenance costs, HFMED has completed the structural optimization of core detachable accessories of surgical equipment this week. The upgraded key accessories adopt tool-free quick disassembly and assembly design with optimized clamping and positioning structure. Medical staff can quickly disassemble, clean, disinfect and independently replace accessories after operation. There are no cleaning dead corners after disassembly, realizing full coverage sterile cleaning of equipment. It simplifies daily maintenance steps, shortens equipment maintenance cycle, and improves the overall turnover efficiency of operating rooms.

 

"Convenient cleaning and maintenance design is an important part of humanized clinical equipment," said the structural process director of HFMED. "Traditional fixed structures have many cleaning dead corners and complicated maintenance procedures. Through detachable structural optimization, we eliminate sterile blind spots of equipment, standardize postoperative disinfection operations, reduce hospital labor and maintenance costs, and help operating rooms achieve efficient and standardized infection control management."

 

Frequently Asked Questions

 

Q1: What infection control and maintenance drawbacks do traditional fixed accessory structures have?

A:The fixed integrated structure has numerous gaps and dead corners, which easily accumulate blood stains and dirt and breed bacteria. It is impossible to achieve thorough disinfection, leaving hidden dangers of intraoperative cross-infection. In addition, damaged accessories cannot be replaced independently, requiring overall disassembly and professional maintenance, which is time-consuming and labor-intensive, affecting the normal use and turnover efficiency of equipment.

 

Q2: What is the core value of detachable accessory structure optimization?

A:The optimized tool-free quick detachable structure eliminates equipment cleaning dead corners, realizes thorough postoperative disinfection, and effectively reduces the risk of hospital infection. It supports independent replacement of local damaged accessories, simplifies maintenance operations, shortens equipment downtime, reduces hospital maintenance labor and time costs, and greatly improves the flexibility and practicability of clinical equipment management.