Germicidal Ultraviolet Disinfection in the Days of COVID-19

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About this Course

The IES offers Educational Webinars throughout the year, purposefully spanning a broad range of topics and speaker expertise. The Germicidal Ultraviolet Disinfection in the Days of COVID-19 was a live webinar, now available as an archived webinar and CEU course.

Description:  Amidst the current uncertainty of the global pandemic, the Illuminating Engineering Society (IES) has facilitated an educational program to provide a thoughtful, in-depth look at GUV Disinfection. Building upon the basics of photobiology, which will be discussed, our presenters will provide insight into germicidal ultraviolet (GUV), carcinogenicity risks, UV-C lamp sources, and current relevant research. 

There are seven individual videos for this 4 hour course, they can be watched at your leisure simply by logging back in, and resuming the course via your My eLearning Dashboard. The certificate for proof of completion will be available for download only after watching each video in its entirety, 4 IES CEUs/4 AIA LU-HSW are available upon completion of this course. 

Learning Objectives:

By the end of this course learners will be able to...

1. Identify basics of photobiology, and learn how light can play a role in mitigating the spread of illness in the built environment.
2. Analyze different aspects of light & health to apply those concepts to the programming or design phase of a project.
3. Learn the safety risks of Germicidal Ultra-Violet Disinfection to building occupants and how to mitigate that risk with proper planning and documentation.
4. Explore current design strategies for including GUV luminaires in various applications.

Key:

Complete
Failed
Available
Locked
Advances in Germicidal UV Applications
Open to view video.
Open to view video. This video is required for course completion, you must watch the video in its entirety to receive CEU(s).
GUV Photobiology Basics and Safety
Open to view video.
Open to view video. This video is required for course completion, you must watch the video in its entirety to receive CEU(s).
Action Spectra: Sources of Guidance Regarding Photocarcinogenesis
Open to view video.
Open to view video. This video is required for course completion, you must watch the video in its entirety to receive CEU(s).
Sources for UVG
Open to view video.
Open to view video. This video is required for course completion, you must watch the video in its entirety to receive CEU(s).
Upper Room UVGI Air Disinfection Systems Applications
Open to view video.
Open to view video. This video is required for course completion, you must watch the video in its entirety to receive CEU(s).
UV-C In-duct Applications
Open to view video.
Open to view video. This video is required for course completion, you must watch the video in its entirety to receive CEU(s).
Whole Room and Other UVC Applications
Open to view video.
Open to view video. This video is required for course completion, you must watch the video in its entirety to receive CEU(s).
Survey
3 Questions
3 Questions This survey is required for course completion.
Certificate
4.00 CEUs / AIA LUs-HSW credits  |  Certificate available
4.00 CEUs / AIA LUs-HSW credits  |  Certificate available

Dr. Edward Nardell

Dr. Edward Nardell is a professor in the Departments of Medicine and of Global Health and Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School and an associate professor in the Departments of Immunology and Infectious Diseases and of Environmental Health at the Harvard School of Public Health. He is an associate in medicine in the Department of Medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH), in both the Division of Global Health Equity and the Pulmonary Division. His research interests involve the control of tuberculosis under resource-limited conditions, with a focus on the pathogenesis of drug-resistant tuberculosis, its airborne transmission, and transmission control in institutions.

David H. Sliney, Ph.D

Consulting Medical Physicist

Dr. David H. Sliney, Ph.D., serves as chair of the IES Photobiology Committee and holds a Ph.D. in biophysics and medical physics from the University of London, Institute of Ophthalmology. He worked for the US Army Public Health Center until retiring in 2007. His research interests focus on UV effects upon the eye, optical hazards from intense light sources and lasers, laser-tissue interactions and laser applications in medicine and surgery. He served as member, advisor and chairman of numerous committees active in the establishment of safety standards for protection against non-ionizing radiation (ANSI, ISO, ACGIH, IEC, WHO, NCRP, and ICNIRP).

Paul Donald Forbes

Paul Donald Forbes is an experienced teacher, researcher, manager, advisor, and consultant. His positions have included Professor in Temple University Medical School, Director of Charles River Phototoxicology  research and testing laboratory, and Senior Toxicologist in the Toxarus consulting firm. He has instructed undergraduates, graduate students and dermatology residents; has supported development of, and ongoing research in, phototoxicology laboratories such as the FDA’s NCTR, Arkansas.  Scientific meetings, collaborative research and client services led him throughout Europe, UK, Australia and Japan over a 45+ year career. He has provided leadership in scientific societies; his current professional efforts are invested in consulting on new product development.  PubMed lists 45 peer-reviewed articles; other publications include professional standards and other guidance documents.  Memberships include American Society for Photobiology, Academy of Toxicological Sciences and IARC panels.

Dr. Rolf Bergman

Dr. Rolf Bergman is currently an independent consultant (sole proprietor) in lighting technology and measurements. After graduating with a Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering in 1972 from the University of Minnesota, Dr. Bergman worked for over twenty-eight years at GE Lighting, all at Nela Park, Cleveland, OH, both as an individual contributor and manager in lamp technology. While at GE Lighting he was involved new product and process development, measurement capability and industry standards. Dr. Bergman was named Chief Scientist, Lamp Technology in 1992, a position he held until retirement in 2001. Currently, among other consulting work, he serves as an assessor of lighting laboratories for accreditation to NVLAP, and accrediting body organized at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST).

Richard Vincent, FIES

Manager

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

Richard Vincent is the Manager, the Brickner Research Unit on Community Medicine and TB/UV Studies at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mt Sinai Hospital in New York. He is a leader in the refinement of upper-room germicidal UV for control of infectious disease, such as tuberculosis. He has been a consultant to many healthcare facilities in providing guidance on efficacy of germicidal ultraviolet and spoken throughout the world on this technology. He has long been active in the IES Photobiology Committee and is currently the chair of an ASHRAE Committee preparing guidance on Upper Room germicidal UV. Further he chairs the CIE TC 6-52 on the gonioradiometric measurement of UVGI luminaires.

Dean Saputa

Dean Saputa has served the HVAC community for more than three decades, helping to educate and train facility managers, specifying engineers and industry professionals with an emphasis on air and surface treatment and cleaning technologies. The vice president and co-founder of UV Resources, Mr. Saputa is an active member on several ASHRAE Technical Committees including serving as a past Chair of TC-2.9 (Ultraviolet Air and Surface Treatment); Chair of SPC-185 (Method of Testing Ultraviolet Lamps), and Founder of GPC-37, Guidelines for the Application of Upper-Air Ultraviolet Germicidal Devices to Control the Transmission of Airborne Pathogens.  He is a contributing author of the 2019 ASHRAE Application Handbook, chapter 62: “Ultraviolet Air and Surface Treatment,” as well as ASHRAE’s position document: “Filtration and Air Cleaning” that was reaffirmed in 2018.

Dr. Paul Jensen

Dr. Paul Jensen has worked at the Center for Disease Control and Prevention for over 30 years. He is currently serving as the Lead for Airborne Infection Prevention & Control and Laboratory Biosafety, both domestically and internationally, and is assigned to the Global TB Branch, Division of Global HIV/AIDS & TB (DGHT), Center for Global Health, US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, Georgia.