KS · Sterilization compliance
Kansas Dental Sterilization Compliance Requirements
What Kansas dental practices must do to stay compliant with Kansas Dental Board, current as of April 2026.
Quick answer
- BI cadence
- After 6 days of use OR monthly, whichever first
- Record retention
- 3 years
- Enforcement agency
- Kansas Dental Board
- Primary citation
- K.A.R. 71-5
Biological monitoring (spore testing)
After every 6 days of use, or at least once a month, whichever comes first. Practices using sterilizers heavily land on weekly de facto.
Worth flagging: One of the few states with a hybrid usage-or-calendar rule.
Federal guidance applied in Kansas
CDC referenced
Even where state rules are silent on a specific point, the CDC's 2003 Guidelines for Infection Control in Dental Health-Care Settings are treated as the de facto standard of care by every US state board. Boards routinely cite practices for "unprofessional conduct" when CDC standards are not followed.
What you should keep on file
- A weekly (or per-state-cadence) biological-indicator log with matching control results, lot numbers, and expiration dates
- A per-cycle log identifying sterilizer, operator, load contents, and chemical-indicator result
- Documented response to any positive spore test (recall procedure, retest result, root cause)
- Sterilizer maintenance and service records (preventive maintenance + repair)
- A list of staff authorized to operate sterilizers, with training completion dates
- A written infection-control plan referencing CDC 2003 guidelines
How Cuspid handles Kansas compliance
- Captures BI tests on the cadence required by Kansas, with matching control results and lot tracking
- Auto-generates an audit-ready PDF over any date range, filtered to your sterilizers and staff
- Triggers a documented remediation workflow on every positive spore test
- Maintains tamper-evident audit trail of who logged what and when
Primary sources
- K.A.R. 71-5
- CDC Summary of Infection Prevention Practices in Dental Settings
- CDC Guidelines for Infection Control in Dental Health-Care Settings (2003)
- ADA Record Retention guidance
Note: Kansas's entry on this page is partially derived from secondary sources (compliance-vendor matrices, OSHA Review summaries). Primary state code text should be reviewed before relying on this summary in a high-stakes context.