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Dental Tribune United Kingdom Edition

How the best perform GRACEY CURETTES AND EVEREDGE THE MOST EFFICIENT COMBINATION FOR ALL YOUR HAND SCALING NEEDS PERIODONTAL EVEREDGE® TECHNOLOGY is unlike anything you’ve experienced before in a scaler. We’ve applied state- of-the-art technology in metallurgy, heat treatment and crynogenics to create a superior stainless steel alloy for scalers and curettes that stay sharper longer than any instrument you’ve used. That means less frequent sharpening, less hand fatigue, and greater comfort throughout the day. The improved sharpness of EVEREDGE® TECHNOLOGY instruments does not come from a superficial coating – the long-lasting wear is present throughout the entire instrument tip. ©2012 Hu-Friedy Mfg. Co., LLC. All rights reserved. For more information on our products please: - call us on 0770 318 6612 or 0770 318 6474, - visit our website www.hu-friedy.eu - e-mail us on info@hufriedy.eu - contact your regular Dental Dealer. STANDARD GRACEY CURETTE SG5/675 AFTER FIVE GRACEY CURETTE SRP11/1273 MINI FIVE GRACEY CURETTE SAS7/877 HU-FRIEDY - THE ORIGINAL MANUFACTURER OF GRACEY CURETTES! STANDARD GRACEY CURETTE — The Gracey curettes combine a unique offset blade with 9 different shank designs to be used on specific tooth surfaces, thus improving adaptation and deposit removal. Also referred to as Finishing Gracey Curettes. AFTER FIVE GRACEY CURETTE — Designed for instrumentation in deeper periodontal pockets. Elongated terminal shank (3mm) provides better clearance around crowns, and superior access to root contours and pockets 5 mm or more in depth. Thinner blade permits easier subgingival insertion. MINI FIVE GRACEY CURETTE — Designed with the same elongated terminal shank (3 mm) and thinned blades as the After Five Gracey Curettes. 50% shorter blade for access to smaller roots, narrow pockets, furcations, and developmental grooves. Gracey ad_GB_A4_2012.indd 1 16.02.12 14:38 I n 2009, a group of micro- biologists established the Association for European Safety & Infection Control in Dentistry (AESIC), an organi- sation that promotes Euro- pean collaboration for shared knowledge and uniform legis- lation on infection control and dental hygiene. This March, AESIC and ACTA, an academic centre for dental education in the Netherlands, organised a conference in Amsterdam with the theme Harmonising dental infection prevention guidelines in Europe. During the confer- ence, steps were taken towards establishing a collaborative working group to collect and share dental infection control guidelines in Europe. Dental Tribune Netherlands spoke with Dr Hans de Soet, microbiologist and expert in infection control at ACTA, and chairperson of the event. Dental Tribune Netherlands: Dr De Soet, what are your thoughts on the conference in Amsterdam? Dr Hans de Soet: It was a suc- cessful conference. At last year’s European Oral Microbiology workshop, we sensed a need for harmonisation in dental hygiene and infection control. Apparently, there are substantial regulation differences among European countries: in some, these regula- tions are set up as laws, while in other countries they are merely stipulations. The way in which these guidelines are enforced also varies. The conference offered lectures on the current situation in the Netherlands, Ireland, Scotland, Germany and Sweden. What is the most noteworthy regarding the current situation in these countries? I did not observe any fundamental differences. There are, of course, some minor variations. For exam- ple, in some countries gloves can be used more than once. Gener- ally though, the regulations are quite similar. In Scandinavia, dentists are obligated to record their activi- ties concerning infection control according to 10 stipulations. Each requires a separate record, such as “equipment validation”. This seems practical and logical, but is Infection control is continually neglected in dental education DTI’s Ben Adriaanse interviews Dr Hans de Soet, microbiologist and expert in infection control 19Infection Control TribuneJune 4-10, 2012United Kingdom Edition 19 ‘In Scandinavia, dentists are obligated to record their activites concerning infec- tion control accord- ing to 10 stipula- tions. Each requires a separate record, such as “equipment validation”’ page 20DT ß