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Controls to prevent contamination when installing an epoxy flooring

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Best Answer , 29 April 2016 - 06:14 PM

I urge you to seal that room.  In concrete there is very likely to be microbiological contamination, especially Listeria.  If you don't have doors sealing off other areas, use polythene screening.  

 

Before you start, plan out the works.  Who will be doing them?  What equipment will they be using?  Where will screening go?  Who will supervise the works?  

 

During the works, supervise them and it's advisable (IMO) to take swabs outside of screening (to check it's effective but also inside screening while it's dirty.  This gives you a potential root cause if an issue does occur later (and it sometimes does).  Settle plates for yeasts and moulds might also be a good idea depending on your product.  Ensure the work team clean up the debris.

 

After.  When the works are done, clean the "dirty area" before reinstating as a production area and taking down the screen.  After this, you may even want to think about changing your cleaning equipment or at least cleaning it thoroughly.  Once the screen is down, clean it again and I mean everything.  Ceilings, walls, floors.  Might be worth fogging with disinfectant if possible.  When you're happy the room is clean, move the kit back in then clean and disinfect that before even thinking about producing.

 

Ensure you record the process and what was monitored etc.  Might sound like overkill but then I don't know your product but floor works are notorious for causing contamination.


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matthewcc

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Posted 29 April 2016 - 02:33 PM

Hello good people, I've seen a few threads on epoxy flooring, but I didn't see much on requirements for putting one down.

 

Specifically, we are replacing a chipped paint floor with an epoxy floor.  We are a dietary supplement manufacturer subject to United States FDA 21 CFR Part 111 GMP's.

 

We are going to move all raw materials and equipment out of the room, of course, but beyond that, how far away do raw materials and equipment need to be kept, and for how long?

 

Thank you in advance,

 

Matthew



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Posted 29 April 2016 - 03:55 PM

Excellent that you can remove all equipment from the room.  That helps, but you asked how far which implies to me that the room is not completely closed.  I assume there will be chiseling and grinding, so if you can seal off the room to contain the dust the process will create, that is ideal.  If you cannot seal off the room, cover everything you can.  There will likely be a lot of dust, more than you would think.  Let the dust settle, remove your covers, and clean the equipment.  This is advice from a distance, so take it for what it's worth.



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Posted 29 April 2016 - 06:14 PM   Best Answer

I urge you to seal that room.  In concrete there is very likely to be microbiological contamination, especially Listeria.  If you don't have doors sealing off other areas, use polythene screening.  

 

Before you start, plan out the works.  Who will be doing them?  What equipment will they be using?  Where will screening go?  Who will supervise the works?  

 

During the works, supervise them and it's advisable (IMO) to take swabs outside of screening (to check it's effective but also inside screening while it's dirty.  This gives you a potential root cause if an issue does occur later (and it sometimes does).  Settle plates for yeasts and moulds might also be a good idea depending on your product.  Ensure the work team clean up the debris.

 

After.  When the works are done, clean the "dirty area" before reinstating as a production area and taking down the screen.  After this, you may even want to think about changing your cleaning equipment or at least cleaning it thoroughly.  Once the screen is down, clean it again and I mean everything.  Ceilings, walls, floors.  Might be worth fogging with disinfectant if possible.  When you're happy the room is clean, move the kit back in then clean and disinfect that before even thinking about producing.

 

Ensure you record the process and what was monitored etc.  Might sound like overkill but then I don't know your product but floor works are notorious for causing contamination.



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