• The cold zone is defined as an area that holds your sterile materials.
    This area is not to be touched during the tattoo process
    at all. For our purposes, the tattoo process begins once the skin
    of the client has

  • It may not have crossed your mind, but while a tattoo is in progress
    thousands of tiny splatters of bodily fluid and ink will hit the
    artist. Some of these microscopic spatters will hit the artist in the
    face.

  • Personal Protective Equipment (PPE):

    • Hand hygiene (soap and water method as well as alcoholbased
    hand rub)
    • Gloves
    • Protective eyewear
    • Gowns
    • Masks

  • Every tattoo studio should have a “dirty” room where biohazardous
    material is kept and regularly disposed of. In your work
    area you should a rubbish can, or non-regulated waste and a
    biohazard can, also called

  • Types of barrier control devices used under Universal and Standard
    Precautions are:

    • Nonporous covering on all furniture
    • Nonporous flooring
    • Nonporous working surface
    • Protective sheath covering tools (to be

  • There are a lot of preventative ways to keep bodily fluids off of
    yourself, your client and your equipment using barrier control
    devices also called barrier protection. Avoiding contact with
    bodily fluids can be

  • The CDC also goes on to define bodily fluids as:

    • Blood
    • Bodily fluids containing visible blood
    • Semen
    • Vaginal fluid
    • Cerebrospinal fluid (around the inside of the brain)
    • Synovial fluid (of the joint

  • The CDC defines universal precautions as:
    “a set of precautions designed to prevent transmission of human
    immunodeficiency virus (HIV), hepatitis B virus (HBV), and other
    blood-borne pathogens when providing first

  • The key thing to know about chemicals is that not all are approved
    for use with your instruments that will come in contact
    with the skin, and some may cause some serious damage to
    your expensive professional

  • There can also be some complications when using chemicals
    to clean your equipment. Leather armrests and furniture can
    be all but destroyed if the wrong chemicals are used on them.
    Your tattoo machines may corrode

  • Sanitation chemicals come from all different suppliers and
    manufacturers. These chemicals are typically not usable on
    instruments that will come in direct contact with the human skin,
    because they are too much of

  • The tools that are directly used in the tattoo process are typically
    the primary focus of sanitation. It is important to also remember
    that the surfaces around the work area are just as prone to bodily
    fluid

  • This is just an opinion, and a good foundation for a beginner
    to practice. You will see that a great number of artists do not
    use disposable tubes and tips, and even less will use disposable
    inks. Most clients are

  • The typical ink or pigment that is used in tattoo process is kept
    in a bottle, usually 1oz-8oz. The artist is supposed to open the
    ink bottle, and fill the caps with ink prior to starting the tattoo.
    The artist is

  • Arguably, one of the greatest inventions or advancements in
    the tattoo industry is the disposable tube and grip. I say arguably
    because some artists appall them and refuse to use them.
    I swear by them and have

  • According to CDC (Center for Disease Control) guidelines:
    “If spores are not killed in routine spore
    tests, the sterilizer should immediately
    be checked for proper use and function
    and the spore test repeated. If

  • The seals must be replaced on your autoclave and you
    must conduct preventative maintenance checks and servicing
    regularly on all expendable parts of the autoclave.
    Equipment must be cleaned prior to sterilization

  • Sometimes it is hard for artists to remain vigilant in regards to
    disease and infection prevention. That is why it is highly recommended
    for all studios to
    hold internal, mandatory,
    refresher training for

  • HCV is transmitted primarily through large or repeated percutaneous
    (i.e., passage through the skin) exposures to infectious
    blood, such as:
    Injection drug use (currently the most common means of HCV
    transmission

  • Here is an example scenario:
    Joe conducted a weekly spore test on his primary autoclave
    on 01 January.

    Joe ran 200 tube and tip combos though his autoclave from
    01 January though 08 January.

    Joe conducted a

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