Hospital water equipment mainly refers to the water used in the hospital disinfection supply room (which can be used in conjunction with various cleaning machines, cleaning vehicles, and high-pressure sterilization equipment), used for the final rinsing of various medical equipment, tools, and items

Hospital water equipment mainly refers to the water used in the hospital disinfection supply room (which can be used in conjunction with various cleaning machines, cleaning vehicles, and high-pressure sterilization equipment), used for the final rinsing of various medical equipment, tools, and items. Water characteristics:
Produced water quality: meets the purified water standards and GMP standards of the Chinese Hospital Disinfection Supply Center WS310.123-2009 and 2005 editions of the Pharmacopoeia;
Ion removal rate: ≥ 99%; Removal rate of endotoxins and bacteria: ≥ 99.9%;
Recovery rate: ≥ 76%;
Inlet requirements: municipal water supply, supply pressure: 0.2Mpa-0.4Mpa, total hardness ≤ 8mmol/L, inlet temperature: 5-35 ℃;
Power supply voltage: AC380V, three-phase five wire, stable grounding;
Environment: Temperature: 5-40 ℃, humidity<85%, no dust and strong electromagnetic interference.
The difference between hospital water and pharmaceutical water (to put it simply) is quite significant. Hospital water is generally softened or pure water, while pharmaceutical water mostly uses pure water and high-purity water.
There are two places for hospital water supply: 1. Pure water equipment for hemodialysis; 2. Supply department auxiliary water supply equipment, mainly used to supply water for ultrasonic cleaning machines, steam disinfection machines, and general medical equipment cleaning. Previously, softened water and tap water were used, but now pure water equipment is commonly used. The difference between the above two is that the former requires a medical equipment production certificate (i.e. medical qualification), while the latter does not, so the same thing has a significant price difference.
According to different processes, the water equipment used by pharmaceutical factories also varies, depending on their specific process requirements. Solid drugs generally use pure water, while liquid drugs require high-purity water.