South Dakota Dental Sterilization & Spore Testing Requirements (2026)
Here's what South Dakota requires for sterilizer monitoring and record retention — verified against the state's primary source — plus what an inspector checks and a free printable log sheet.
At least weekly (CDC standard)
South Dakota incorporates the CDC infection-control guidance for dentistry by reference, which requires biological (spore) testing of each sterilizer at least weekly.
Not state-set
South Dakota does not set an explicit retention period for sterilization-monitoring logs. CDC/OSHA best practice is to keep them at least 3 years.
ARSD 20:43:04:03 (incorporates CDC Guidelines for Infection Control in Dental Health-Care Settings, 2003)
Informational only — not legal advice. Verify current requirements with your state dental board.
What an inspector checks in South Dakota
When a South Dakotaboard inspector or surveyor reviews a practice's sterilization records, they're confirming the monitoring actually happened and is documented. Expect them to look for:
- A spore-test log showing at least weekly (cdc standard) biological monitoring of every heat sterilizer in use.
- Sterilization-monitoring records kept and available on site (CDC/OSHA best practice: at least 3 years).
- Chemical-indicator results recorded for processed loads, plus mechanical (time/temp/pressure) confirmation.
- Documented corrective action for any failed spore test, including retest and instrument recall.
- Compliance consistent with ARSD 20:43:04:03 (incorporates CDC Guidelines for Infection Control in Dental Health-Care Settings, 2003).
South Dakota sterilization FAQ
- How often do dental practices in South Dakota need to run a spore (biological) test?
- South Dakota incorporates the CDC infection-control guidance for dentistry by reference, which requires biological (spore) testing of each sterilizer at least weekly.
- How long must South Dakota dental offices keep sterilization and spore-test records?
- South Dakota does not set an explicit retention period for sterilization-monitoring logs. CDC/OSHA best practice is to keep them at least 3 years.
- What regulation governs dental sterilization monitoring in South Dakota?
- In South Dakota, sterilization monitoring is governed by ARSD 20:43:04:03 (incorporates CDC Guidelines for Infection Control in Dental Health-Care Settings, 2003). ClaveLog has verified this against the primary source.
- What should a South Dakota practice do if a spore test fails?
- Follow the CDC protocol: immediately take the affected sterilizer out of service, review the load, and re-test. Re-process and recall any implicated instruments as directed, document every step with dates and initials, and only return the sterilizer to service after a passing biological test. Keep this corrective-action record with your South Dakota sterilization log — inspectors look for it.
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