ISSA to Convene Healthcare Surfaces Summit |
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| Contributed by BSM Staff | |
ROSEMONT, IL -- With pressure to deliver safer, more sustainable care rising, ISSA, the Association for Cleaning & Facility Solutions, will convene healthcare, science, and hygiene experts for the 2026 Healthcare Surfaces Summit in May. Hosted by ISSA Healthcare and the Healthcare Surfaces Institute (HSI), a division of ISSA, the two-day Summit (May 5–6, 2026 at ISSA global headquarters) will bring together a high-level group of clinicians, infection preventionists, environmental services leaders, scientists, manufacturers, distributors, and regulatory experts. “At a time when healthcare systems are under extraordinary pressure, surface safety can no longer be treated as an afterthought,” said Linda Lybert, ISSA Healthcare Lead and Founder and Executive Director of HSI. “The choices we make about surfaces—how they’re designed, tested, cleaned, and maintained—have direct consequences for patients, worker safety, and environmental sustainability. This Summit is about aligning science with practice and innovation across real-life environments.” This year’s Summit is looking at surface intelligence, which means many different things. From the Summit’s perspective, it is a framework reshaping how healthcare environments approach surface selection, cleaning, and infection prevention by recognizing the critical role surfaces play in patient safety and the need to rethink traditional surface-care practices. During the two-day event, participants will:
“The findings and collaborations that emerge from this Summit have real-world consequences,” Lybert added. “They influence how hospitals operate, how products are developed, how environmental services cleaning staff are trained, and ultimately how well we protect patients around the world.” As the association for cleaning & facility solutions, ISSA plays a unique role in bringing together stakeholders who influence every stage of the healthcare surface lifecycle—from product design and testing to deployment, education, and ongoing use in clinical environments. One in six laboratory-confirmed bacterial infections causing common infections in people worldwide in 2023 were resistant to antibiotic treatments, according to the World Health Organization. Between 2018 and 2023, antibiotic resistance rose in over 40% of the pathogen-antibiotic combinations monitored, with an average annual increase of 5-15%. Registration for the 2026 Healthcare Surfaces Summit is now open. Early registration is encouraged due to limited capacity. For more information, go to www.issa.com. |
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