Page 2 Duke Hospital, InterGom completely in heavy muslin covers which can be opened on the front side and need not be changed until worn out. Fully loaded and covered, the shelves can be rolled off their trucks into a sterilizer. To change the cov ers, the shelves will be raised on liooks installed in Central Supply; the old cover peeled off; a new one fitted on; and the shelves replaced on their DR. DERYL HART. Appointed to the chair of surgery in March 1929, Dr. Hart was a member of the original faculty of Duke Medical School. He is an alumnus of Emory University and of Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. Dr. and Mrs. Hart have six children, one of whom, Elizabeth Hart King, will be graduated from Duke Medical School in June. truck. When ready for use these shelves will contain all of the sterile instruments and material need for the operations in the 18 operating rooms. The instruments will be in three units: a work tray, a basic set used in all operations, and a specialty set for that particular operation. All fixed wall shelves for reserve supplies in the Preparation Area have been built high enough to allow tables to be stored underneath. Clean-Up Area. The operation com pleted, all materials and instruments are placed on the supply table and returned to this room for cleaning or disposal. Two persons can staff' this area which provides both for the clean-up and for stacking of instru ments for later o])erations. Two ty[)es of techniques are used: one for “clean” operations and one for oper ations involving infected material. When a table comes back from a clean operation, gloves, syringes, basins and the like are stacked on rolling shelves to be sent down by elevator to Central Supply for cleaning. Linen is put down the linen chute. Instruments are put to soak and rinsed off. With all joints o])en, they are stacked in wire mesh baskets and put in the ultrasonic instrument cleaner. This machine i)roduces 18,000 vibrations per second in the detergent solution in which the instruments are cleaned, and can do a thorough cleaning job in three to five minutes. The instru ments then go through a rinser and dryei-; their joints are closed; and they are stacked in trays to be ster ilized and returned to the Preparation Area. Following an operation on a patient with an infection, the linen and sup plies which are contaminated, together with the instruments, are placed in a rolling, stainless steel container fitted with a valve in the bottom. This con tainer is rolled to the clean-up area and into a special sterilizer, designed through the combined efforts of the Duke Department of Surgery and the American Sterilizer Company. This sterilizer is equipped with a drainage valve opening directly into a sewer line and W'ith a powerful cold water spray. When the container is rolled into the sterilizer, the valve on the bot tom of the container opens automati cally and the door is closed. The cold w'ater spray is turned on, and the in fected linens and instruments are soaked and drained inside the sealed sterilizer. After soaking, they are sterilized and cooled, and then proc essed in the same manner as material used in clean operations. Operating Area. The new operat ing rooms are finished with wall tile in a soft grey-green. The new cor- Dr. K. Takeshima, Duke Hospital anesthe tist, administers nitrous oxide, an analgesic or pain-blocking gas. Earlier, the patient had gone to sleep under the influence of another drug. ridors and anesthesia rooms are pan elled with stainless steel to eliminate scarring. As collateral equipment for surgery (such as the lieart-lung ma chine or the blood heat exchanger) be comes more conij)licated, the operating team may number as many as ten or twelve persons. To accommodate this ])ersonnel and equipment, the new operating rooms are larger than the old. Above each operating room is a visitors’ gallery equipped with micro phones for two-way conversation. The microphones can be silenced and the gallery darkened from the operating room. The visitors’ galleries, sepa rated from the operating rooms by glass, are on a separate air condition ing system to reduce pollution of the air in the operating rooms. All elec trical outlets including the X-ray view boxes are equipped with explosion proof switches or connections. Con ductive flooring discharges static elec tric current from all equipment and from all individuals who must wear shoes with conductive soles. Water temperature in scrub basins is thermo statically controlled. An explosion proof heating unit heats solutions when necessary. Ultra-violet lights to purify the air are shaded to protect the eyes from glare which can produce (Continued on page 8)