Webinars
Education at your fingertips. Our webinars are on-demand for you to watch on your own time. CE credits are offered with selective webinar offerings.
November 7, 2025
1 CE
Let’s explore the evolving landscape of infection prevention. We’ll revisit the core pillars of infection prevention while learning about new technologies, regulatory standards, and proven practices borrowed from high-reliability industries. The course also addresses ongoing barriers such as IFU compliance, competing priorities, and outbreak management, offering actionable solutions for continuous improvement.
MKT-25-1481
Let's discuss the challenges faced by healthcare facilities in achieving cleaning and disinfection compliance. We'll learn about organism transmission, protocols for better outcomes, resources in cleaning and surface disinfection, and comparisons of different cleaning and disinfection technologies.
MKT-25-0183
Let's explore essential practices for maintaining a healthy school environment, focusing on how germs spread, the importance of hand hygiene and clean spaces, and key elements of an effective cleaning plan. We'll learn proper cleaning methods and products suited for school settings to ensure safety for students and staff.
MKT-24-1640
Let's discuss how the chain of disease transmission relates to medical device reprocessing. We’ll learn the purpose of instrument reprocessing, the categories of the Spaulding classification system, what high-level disinfection is and why it is needed.
MKT-24-1157
Let's learn how to select surface disinfect wipes by focusing on how disinfectants affect different groups of organisms. We’ll take a look at basic microbiology to learn about the similarities and differences in organism groups to help better understand the “Spaulding Hierarchy of Organism Resistance to Disinfectants“.
MKT-23-0509
The year 2020 marked an unprecedented time for hospitals, many of which were faced with extraordinary circumstances of increased patient caseload, staffing challenges, and other operational changes that limited the implementation and effectiveness of standard infection prevention practices, which are key to reducing antimicrobial-resistant infections and their spread.
MKT-23-0535