Clean, the Cleanest I’ve Been (EtO)

A wildebest inspecting medical tools.

There’s a critical difference between biometrics for identification and biometrics for health. Well, MOST biometrics for identification; what I’m about to say doesn’t apply to DNA.

When you capture biometrics from people, you don’t really care about cleanliness. If the person’s fingernails are dirty, you capture the fingerprints anyway. If the eye is infected, you capture the irises anyway.

But when you get into the healthcare arena, cleanliness is next to you-know-what.

And there are technologies for that.

Ethylene Oxide (EtO) gas is one of the most common ways to sterilize medical devices, a safe, tightly controlled, highly regulated process which is critical for preventing infections and ensuring patients have safe surgeries and medical treatments.

And in some cases, EtO is the ONLY way to sterilize some medical devices.

So great! Use it all the time! There’s just one teeny problem

EtO is a human carcinogen. It causes cancer in humans. Scientific evidence in humans indicates that regular exposure to EtO over many years increases the risk of cancers of the white blood cells, including non-Hodgkin lymphoma, myeloma, and lymphocytic leukemia. Studies also show that long-term exposure to EtO increases the risk of breast cancer in women.

Workers who use EtO as a part of their jobs and people who work, live, or go to school or daycare near facilities that use EtO may breathe in EtO at levels that can increase cancer risk.

So there are companies (I won’t name them here, but you can find them) who specialize in mitigating EtO risk to humans.

And these companies need content, proposal, and analysis services.

But let’s get on to the important part: the song I quoted in the title of this post.

From https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h1mD-_DKHc0.

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