News
Sustainable Infection Control in Dentistry: Podcast
Bio Hygiene Director Jurgen Kuhefuss recently joined Michelle Pritchard on the Dental Success Beyond Chairside podcast to discuss the growing importance of sustainable infection control within modern dental practices. Read more to learn how safer, biodegradable solutions are shaping the future of dentistry.
One product isn’t enough. Shock treatments are essential.
In dental suction systems, build-up doesn’t happen all at once, it builds over time. Which means if you’re only maintaining… and never resetting… you’re heading for trouble. If you’re not using a weekly shock treatment, build-up is inevitable. So, it’s not if your lines block — it’s when. Discover how you can prevent it.
The Bio Hygiene Advantage: What Sets Us Apart
No one wakes up excited about disinfectant (except us). But if you run a dental clinic, medical centre, aged care facility, chiropractic clinic or any professional space where hygiene actually matters (so… every professional space), your infection control products are kind of a big deal. So the real question is: Why choose Bio Hygiene?
Protect Your Practice: Common Cleaning Mistakes That Can Ruin Chiropractic Tables
When it comes to maintaining hygiene in your clinic, using the wrong products can do more harm than good. In fact, some of the most common chiropractic cleaning mistakes involve using household cleaners or uncertified disinfectants on professional-grade tables—leading to damaged upholstery, voided warranties, and compromised patient safety.
Buy Australian Made for Smarter Infection Control
Infection control is vital in any clinical setting—but have you ever considered the environmental impact of the products you use daily? The quickest and most effective way your clinic can reduce its carbon footprint is by choosing Australian Made infection control products.
Understanding MSDS and GHS Labels
We should all know by now how to reduce waste and that there are still millions of plastic containers ending up in landfill and in our oceans every year. Coal, oil and natural gases are all used in the process of manufacturing plastic containers. When these eventually breakdown (100’s of years later) gases are released into the atmosphere, mostly methane. …
