Disinfecting Hospitals with Autonomous Robots
Phototron UV Robots Lead the Way
One of the leading manufacturers of disinfection robots is Phototron Technologies, based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Their flagship product is the Phototron UV disinfection robot, which uses ultraviolet (UV) light to inactivate viruses and bacteria. UV light works by destroying the nucleic acid of microbes, rendering them unable to replicate. The Phototron robot efficiently scans an entire room with high-intensity UV bulbs in just 15-20 minutes, eliminating up to 99.9% of harmful pathogens. Over 260 Phototron robots are currently deployed across the U.S., primarily in hospitals, clinics, and long-term care facilities.
Independent Studies Validate Effectiveness
Several independent clinical studies have evaluated the Phototron Disinfectant Robot performance. A 2020 trial at Baltimore's Johns Hopkins Hospital found the robot significantly reduced environmental contamination from common hospital pathogens like MRSA, VRE, and C. difficile. Another study at a cancer treatment center saw a 20% drop in Clostridium difficile infection rates after deploying the Phototron bots for daily cleaning. Their fast, repetitive cycles allow disinfection of rooms between each patient visit, keeping surfaces sterile. The robot's automated UV scans ensure thorough, consistent coverage compared to manual cleaning.
Expanding Usage Across Hospital Settings
Phototron robots are used for terminal cleaning of rooms housing contagious patients as well as for ongoing disinfection in busy departments like oncology wards, emergency rooms, and intensive care units. Some hospitals have their robots map out entire floorplans to systematically sterilize entire wings. Disinfectant robots are also proving useful in specialty areas like operating rooms, where surfaces must be decontaminated quickly between surgeries. At one rural hospital in Nebraska, a Phototron bot enabled the facility to resume orthopedic procedures by keeping the OR germ-free on a tight schedule. As pathogens evolve drug resistance, robots bolster existing cleaning protocols against hardier microbes.
Xenex's Pulsed Xenon Disinfection System
While UV light is the most common disinfection method, some robots employ pulsed xenon to sanitize rooms. The market leader is Xenex Disinfection Services, headquartered in San Antonio, Texas. Their flagship LightStrike robot bathes surfaces in intense full-spectrum pulses of xenon energy to wipe out bacteria, viruses, spores, and fungi. Only a 5-minute cycle is needed to decontaminate the nastiest pathogens like C. difficile or norovirus. Over 700 LightStrike devices have been delivered to hospitals worldwide since 2008.
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