Select Page

Waste Water Pump

Home Forums Infexion Connexion Waste Water Pump

 | Click to Receive Email Notifications of Posts
  • This topic is empty.
Viewing 2 posts - 1 through 2 (of 2 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #77364
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Author:
    Anonymous

    Position:

    Organisation:

    State:

    Hi Brains Trust,

    I have recently had a ‘waste water pump’ recommended as a solution for a waste water issue. I am unfamiliar with these devices but I believe these pumps are being suggested to pump waste water from clinical hand wash basins up and over a wall into a ceiling and then connect to an existing waste stream elsewhere in the building.

    Is anyone familiar with these pumps or has anyone assessed their infection control risk previously, if so can you please provide feedback on them.

    Kind regards,

    Fiona De Sousa CICP-E| Nurse Manager | Infection Prevention & Control Unit
    Launceston General Hospital, Level 2, Launceston TAS 7250
    phone: 6777 6715 | mobile: 0408 487 197 | fax: 6777 5170 | email: fiona.de.sousa@ths.tas.gov.au |
    intranet: http://www.dhhs.tas.gov.au/intranet/thon/infection_control

    IPCU – ‘By working together we promote a culture of safety to reduce preventable infections and transmission of multi-resistant organisms’

    ________________________________

    CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE AND DISCLAIMER
    The information in this transmission may be confidential and/or protected by legal professional privilege, and is intended only for the person or persons to whom it is addressed. If you are not such a person, you are warned that any disclosure, copying or dissemination of the information is unauthorised. If you have received the transmission in error, please immediately contact this office by telephone, fax or email, to inform us of the error and to enable arrangements to be made for the destruction of the transmission, or its return at our cost. No liability is accepted for any unauthorised use of the information contained in this transmission.

    MESSAGES POSTED TO THIS LIST ARE SOLELY THE OPINION OF THE AUTHOR, AND DO NOT REPRESENT THE OPINION OF ACIPC.

    The use of trade/product/commercial brand names through the list is discouraged by ACIPC. If you wish to discuss specific reference to products or services by brand or commercial names, please do this outside the list.

    Archive of all messages are available at http://aicalist.org.au/archives – registration and login required.

    Replies to this message will be directed back to the list. To create a new message send an email to acipclist@acipc.org.au

    To send a message to the list administrator send an email to admin@acipc.org.au

    You can unsubscribe manually from this list by sending ‘signoff acipclist’ (without the quotes) to listserv@aicalist.org.au

    #77367
    Stephen Adnams
    Participant

    Author:
    Stephen Adnams

    Position:

    Organisation:

    State:

    Good morning Fiona,

    The pump you have been recommended is a macerator pump. See below link. This is for a toilet system but the principle is the same.

    https://www.bunnings.com.au/saniflo-sanitop-domestic-macerator-pump_p4817625

    Your sink outlet empties directly in to the unit. Internally there will be a float indicating when the unit is full. When the unit is full, the float will turn on the pump and the unit will empty itself automatically.

    From leaving your sink to entering your waste supply, the system is completely enclosed.

    The plumbers will know this, but they need non-return valves to stop the waste water flowing back in to the unit, without non-return valves, as soon as the pump switches off, the water in the pipe will run back in to the unit. Personally I would ask for 2 non-return valves. One at the outlet from the unit and one where it connects to the existing water line. That way you will have protection from the waster water you have just pumped out and will also have protection from any waste within the existing waste line. If you don’t have a non-return valve at the point you connect to the existing waste line and there is a blockage on this line, you could be in a position where that waste is flowing in to your pump line.

    The only other point to be aware of is the pumping capacity of the pump. Your plumber should work this out, but the pump will have a limit to how far it can pump water. The pump on the link can pump 50 meters across a horizontal pipe or can pump 5 meters vertically. Your plumber will need to work out the vertical distance as well as horizontal distance from your macerator pump to the waste line they are connecting to. This is to make sure you have a pump with a big enough capacity to pump the water the required distance.

    Hopefully that all makes sense. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact me.

    Kind regards,

    Stephen Adnams

    T 1300 680 898
    F +61 (0)3 9533 6193
    M +61 (0)403 129 444

    [cid:image001.jpg@01D69BC5.6A2FFA00]

    [cid:image002.jpg@01D69BC5.6A2FFA00]

    Tristel Pty Ltd.
    40/328 Reserve Road | Cheltenham | VIC | Australia | 3192

    If you have received this message in error, please notify us and remove it from your email system.
    Save a tree. Don’t print this email unless it’s really necessary.

    Hi Brains Trust,

    I have recently had a ‘waste water pump’ recommended as a solution for a waste water issue. I am unfamiliar with these devices but I believe these pumps are being suggested to pump waste water from clinical hand wash basins up and over a wall into a ceiling and then connect to an existing waste stream elsewhere in the building.

    Is anyone familiar with these pumps or has anyone assessed their infection control risk previously, if so can you please provide feedback on them.

    Kind regards,

    Fiona De Sousa CICP-E| Nurse Manager | Infection Prevention & Control Unit
    Launceston General Hospital, Level 2, Launceston TAS 7250
    phone: 6777 6715 | mobile: 0408 487 197 | fax: 6777 5170 | email: fiona.de.sousa@ths.tas.gov.au |
    intranet: http://www.dhhs.tas.gov.au/intranet/thon/infection_control

    IPCU – ‘By working together we promote a culture of safety to reduce preventable infections and transmission of multi-resistant organisms’

    ________________________________

    CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE AND DISCLAIMER
    The information in this transmission may be confidential and/or protected by legal professional privilege, and is intended only for the person or persons to whom it is addressed. If you are not such a person, you are warned that any disclosure, copying or dissemination of the information is unauthorised. If you have received the transmission in error, please immediately contact this office by telephone, fax or email, to inform us of the error and to enable arrangements to be made for the destruction of the transmission, or its return at our cost. No liability is accepted for any unauthorised use of the information contained in this transmission.
    MESSAGES POSTED TO THIS LIST ARE SOLELY THE OPINION OF THE AUTHOR, AND DO NOT REPRESENT THE OPINION OF ACIPC.

    The use of trade/product/commercial brand names through the list is discouraged by ACIPC. If you wish to discuss specific reference to products or services by brand or commercial names, please do this outside the list.

    Archive of all messages are available at http://aicalist.org.au/archives – registration and login required.

    Replies to this message will be directed back to the list. To create a new message send an email to acipclist@acipc.org.au

    To send a message to the list administrator send an email to admin@acipc.org.au

    You can unsubscribe manually from this list by sending ‘signoff acipclist’ (without the quotes) to listserv@aicalist.org.au

    MESSAGES POSTED TO THIS LIST ARE SOLELY THE OPINION OF THE AUTHOR, AND DO NOT REPRESENT THE OPINION OF ACIPC.

    The use of trade/product/commercial brand names through the list is discouraged by ACIPC. If you wish to discuss specific reference to products or services by brand or commercial names, please do this outside the list.

    Archive of all messages are available at http://aicalist.org.au/archives – registration and login required.

    Replies to this message will be directed back to the list. To create a new message send an email to acipclist@acipc.org.au

    To send a message to the list administrator send an email to admin@acipc.org.au

    You can unsubscribe manually from this list by sending ‘signoff acipclist’ (without the quotes) to listserv@aicalist.org.au

Viewing 2 posts - 1 through 2 (of 2 total)
  • The forum ‘Infexion Connexion’ is closed to new topics and replies.