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Recommendations for Cleaning Toys and Equipment
Compiled by The Tom Thom Club P. O. Box
251, South Fork, Colorado
Phone: 719-873-5980 Fax: 719-873-5537
E-mail: tomthom@fone.net
The easiest way to prevent the spread of
diseases is to only use any toy, on only one
person! If a toy is going to be used on more
than one person, it must either be
sterilized or cleaned and decontaminated, as
recommended, if it has come into contact
with someone's blood, piss, shit or cum!
Even with clean toys, it is a good idea to
put a condom or two on them before use. This
also helps facilitate in cleaning. Also, it
is a good idea to let the toys air dry for
at least 24 hours between uses. Clean toys
can be kept that way, if wrapped in separate
clean towels and ready for the next use. It
is also a good idea to wear latex gloves
when using such toys, unless you are sure
you do not have any cuts, abrasions or
scratches on your hands. Washing hands in
rubbing alcohol will usually tell you, but
not always!
The methods described below are adequate
for decontaminating for HIV, as well as for
many other "bugs". Hepatitis B and C are a
different matter. Blood-borne Hepatitis
virus is very durable and extremely hard to
kill. The B virus may reactivate itself,
even when the following procedures are
performed and the toy air-dried for a few
months, if any dried virus remains on or in
the material--say a leather whip! Hepatitis
C virus should not reactivate itself, if the
toy is cleaned according to the following
directions and air-dried for 2 weeks. The
Hep C Connection in Denver (1-800-522-HEPC)
recommends cleaning, then soaking in the
strongest bleach concentration (20%) the
item can stand for at least 5 minutes, and
air drying for 2 weeks.
Colorado Department of Public Health and
Environment suggests using the chemical
Glutaraldehyde (brand name "Cidex"), a cold
sterilization system used by dentists,
according to manufacturer's directions for
"High Level Disinfectant Usage". Add a
soap/water rinse before final rinse, then
air-drying. It is suggested Cidex may have
be less irritating and less degrading of
rubber/latex, than chlorine bleach. Both
need to be used in an area with good
ventilation and rinse the hell out of the
toy! The Centers for Disease Control has not
made a recommendation, claiming the research
is not there upon which to make one. We
recommend know your Hepatitis status and get
vaccinated for Hepatitis A and B, if needed.
Do the same for your partners. Do not run
the risk of spreading Hepatitis! We further
recommend that bottoms who are positive for
Hepatitis B and/or C should have their own
toys or toys used exclusively on them.
Multiple strains of Hepatitis are out there,
so don't cross contaminate someone positive
with another strain!
Dildos and Butt Plugs, Pool Balls, Enema Equipment, Etc.
Three methods:
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First wash with soapy water to remove all debris from all
"nooks and crannies", antibacterial soap is best.
Then rinse and dry with a clean towel. Next, either soak
the item in a solution of at least 10% chlorine bleach (1
part bleach to 9 parts water) for 4 to 30 minutes (everyone
has their own idea of how long! Personally we go for at least
10 minutes); or soak the item in at least a 25% rubbing alcohol
solution (70% isopropyl alcohol is what is usually sold and can
be used without dilution and is cheap! It is not recommended to
use the 90% solution sometimes sold, as it might only dry and preserve
the "bugs"); or use hydrogen peroxide; or a provodone-iodine
solution, such as Betadine rinsed off with rubbing alcohol. Next
rinse the item well again and dry with a new clean towel. Paper
towels work great for the drying process. Bleach is cheap, change
after each use!
-
Rinse off then run the items through your dishwasher. Note that
your dishwasher must reach a temperature of 135 to 140 degrees
F. and maintain that for at least 4 to 5 minutes.
-
Items, which can stand the heat, can be "baked" in the
oven at 140 to 180 degrees F. for 8 hours or at 300 degrees F. for 1
hour, after being washed with soapy water to remove any debris.
Always let the items cool before you try to use them in/on someone!
Remember not all items can withstand this kind of heat but it works
well on metal butt plugs, metal "eggs" and such. Please don't
melt your favorite latex dildo!
Leather Whips, Gags, Dildos, Etc.
Leather items, that come in contact with someone's blood, piss, shit
or cum, must also be cleaned and decontaminated. Since leather is not
very forgiving of being soaked in wet stuff or "baked", the
problem is a little more difficult than for rubber and latex.
Hydrogen peroxide is not a good choice. Chlorine bleach will discolor
some leather, but can be used in a 10% solution, as described above.
The preferred method seems to be to wash the item in warm soapy
(antibacterial soap preferred) water and dry, pressing out the water
in clean towels. Then use the rubbing alcohol solution (70% isopropyl
alcohol) to clean all the areas. Be especially careful to clean all the
porous parts, such as the stitching in leather dildos (a fingernail
brush will help), you really are still not going to get it all and
these should be one person toys, or at the very least "bagged"
in a condom or three! Rinse and dry the item again in a fresh clean towel.
Next, the leather should be reconditioned. Suggestions include Lexol,
Care 4, bag balm (used on chapped cow udders and other veterinary uses)
and Dubbin. Ask for recommendations from your leather supplier, for what
they consider best. Remember anything going in the body could have
adverse effects, a bad taste being only one!
Kelly Thilbault's Leather and Latex Care (Daedalus Publishing Company,
1996) is highly recommended for all you could ever want to know about
the care and cleaning of these products. As a disclaimer, leather
toys are very difficult to clean, at best, and many health care
professionals feel that even the above methods are not completely
effective, especially true for the Hepatitis B virus, which is
very hard to kill. They strongly advise making them one-person toys!
Many tops simply label the bottom's names on these toy's handles
and reserve their use on only that person.
Catheters, Sounds, Razors, Knives,
Piercing Needles, Branding Irons, Etc.
All the above items, which enter sterile areas of the body or
are intended to draw blood, must be sterilized! The above methods
only clean/decontaminate things and do not sterilize! Ideally,
these items should only be one time use, not even used on the same
person twice, but we all know the reality.
Anytime a sterile area is to be stuffed, cut or pierced, that
area of the body needs to be washed with antibacterial soap,
rinsed and dried (clean towels only, please), and disinfected
with rubbing alcohol, then with a provodone-iodine solution,
such as Betadine (use the stain as a pattern or wipe it off
with alcohol, if it ruins your aesthetics!). The cleaning pattern
should be circular, working away from the area to be "worked
on". It is also a good idea to pull a cock through a clean
towel with a hole in it before you stuff anything up the cock.
Your hands should be scrubbed with antibacterial soap and covered
with sterile gloves (available in pre-sealed packets). Once in the
gloves, only touch sterilized equipment or skin! After any
"procedure", once again, wash the area with antibacterial
soap, rinse with water, dry with a clean towel and disinfect with
rubbing alcohol, then the provodone-iodine solution, such as
Betadine. Needles should be disposed of in a "Sharps
Container".
Sterilization methods:
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An autoclave, using the manufacturer's instructions, or done
for you by someone at a clinic with access.
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The "Pressure Cooker Method" starts with a thorough
cleaning, with a brush if appropriate, then rinsing of the item, as
above, to remove all debris. Next, the items are placed individually
(several piercing needles to be used in one scene may be placed in
one packet) in a sturdy paper packet (paper lunch bags are great!).
And the packets sealed with something like masking tape. The packets
are put in a wire basket or something to keep them out of the
water and placed in a pressure cooker. Follow the manufacturer's
directions for operation of the pressure cooker and "cook"
at 15 pounds of pressure for at least 30 minutes (altitude adjustments
are appropriate). Preheat your oven to 225 degrees F. Remove the basket
from the pressure cooker, without touching the packets, and place it
in the oven to dry for at least 3 hours. Store the packets in a dry
place until you are ready to use them. Remember when you open a
packet, only handle the items with sterile gloves on and after
gloved don't touch anything that is not sterilized!
Recommended Reading (only in the order
in which I picked up the stack of books):
The Leatherman's Handbook II by Larry Townsend
Carlyle Communications, Ltd., New York, New York.
Learning The Ropes, A Basic Guide To Safe And Fun S/M
Lovemaking by Race Brannon
Daedalus Publishing Company, San Francisco, California.
Leathersex Q&A, Questions About Leathersex
And The Leather Lifestyles Answered by Joseph W. Bean
Daedalus Publishing Company, San Francisco, California.
Consensual Sadomasochism, How To Talk About It &
How To Do It Safely by William A. Henkin, Ph.D. and
Sybil Holiday, CCSSE
Daedalus Publishing Company, San Francisco, California.
SM101, A Realistic Introduction by Jay Wiseman
Greenery Press, San Francisco, California.
On The Safe Edge, A Manual For SM Play by Trevor Jacques
with Dr. Dale, Michael Hamilton, & Sniffer
WholeSM Publishing Corporation, Toronto, Canada.
The Lesbian SM Safety Manual edited by Pat Califia
Lace Publications, Denver, Colorado.
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