The #1 Mistake I See During Public Health Inspections (And How Dentists Can Avoid It)
As an infection control consultant, I’ve walked into countless dental offices—some pristine, some struggling, and many somewhere in between. I’ve worked alongside teams preparing for Public Health inspections, responded to urgent compliance issues, and even sat in the room while inspectors reviewed protocols.
And after all of that experience, I can tell you this with complete confidence:
The biggest problem dentists face during a Public Health inspection is not poor clinical practice—it’s poor documentation.
More specifically, it’s this:
Not having a clearly outlined, well-documented infection control program that can be immediately presented upon request.
It’s Not About What You Know—It’s About What You Can Show
…during an inspection, what matters is not just what you’re doing—it’s what you can prove.
Most dentists and their teams are doing the right things clinically. Instruments are being sterilized, PPE is being used, and surfaces are being disinfected.
But during an inspection, what matters is not just what
you’re doing—it’s what you can prove.
Inspectors don’t have time to piece together your processes
from verbal explanations. They’re looking for:
- Written policies
- Structured protocols
- Logs and records
- Evidence of training and monitoring
If your infection control program lives in people’s heads—or scattered across binders, drawers, and desktops—that’s where problems begin.
The Real Issue: Lack of a Centralized, Accessible Program
One of the most common scenarios I see goes like this:
An inspector asks:
Can you show me your infection prevention and control program?
The response:
- Someone starts flipping through multiple binders
- Another team member logs into a computer trying to find documents
- Policies are outdated, inconsistent, or incomplete
- No one is sure where the most current version lives
Even in a well-run office, this creates a perception of disorganization—and in Public Health, perception matters.
What Inspectors Expect (But Many Offices Miss)
Public Health isn’t expecting perfection—but they are expecting clarity and structure.
At a minimum, your infection control program should be:
1. Clearly Written
Your protocols should be documented in plain, understandable language—not vague or assumed.
2. Organized Everything should be easy to navigate:
- Sterilization procedures
- Environmental cleaning
- Hand hygiene
- PPE protocols
- Exposure management
3. Up-to-Date
Policies must reflect current guidelines (e.g., PIDAC, CDC, local Public Health requirements).
4. Immediately Accessible
This is the critical piece.
If an inspector asks for your program, you should be able to produce it within seconds—not minutes.
Why This Matters More Than You Think
When your infection control program is clearly documented and readily available, it does more than just satisfy an inspector:
- It shows leadership and accountability
- It protects your team and patients
- It reduces risk during complaints or audits
- It creates consistency in daily practice
And importantly:
It turns an inspection from a stressful event into a straightforward review.
What I Recommend to Every Dental Office
Based on what I’ve seen in the field, here’s what works best:
Create a Single Source of Truth
Your entire infection control program should live in one centralized system:
- A digital manual (preferred), or
- A clearly organized physical binder
Make It Inspection-Ready at All Times
Assume an inspector could walk in tomorrow. Ask yourself:
- Can I access everything immediately?
- Is it clearly labeled and easy to follow?
- Would someone outside my office understand it?
Train Your Team on Where It Is
It’s not enough for the dentist or office manager to know.
Your team should be able to confidently say:
Yes, here is our infection control program.
Final Thoughts
After years of consulting, I’ve learned this:
Most inspection issues are not due to negligence—they’re due to lack of structure and visibility.
The good news? This is one of the easiest problems to fix.
Because when your infection control program is:
- Clearly outlined
- Properly documented
- And right at your fingertips
You’re not just prepared for an inspection—you’re running a safer, stronger practice

Your clear path starts here
We created a free dental resource to help offices understand where smaller compliance gaps often build over time, which ones carry the most weight, and how to prioritize risk more intentionally.
Stronger offices are built on stronger systems
A well-documented, easy-to-access IPAC program does more than support inspections. It helps protect your team, create consistency, and strengthen the day-to-day foundation of your practice.
And for many offices, that kind of structure does not happen by accident. It comes from having the right systems, the right support, and a clear approach to building a program that can stand up to real-world demands.
Talk to a member of our team about a solution that works for your office.
