Introduction
Water plays a critical — and often underestimated — role in sterile processing. With the release of AAMI ST108, healthcare organizations are now required to manage water quality with the same rigor as any other clinical input.
If your facility processes reusable medical devices, ST108 applies.
If you’re new to the standard, start with our ST108 overview video.
This article outlines how to achieve and sustain ST108 compliance, with practical steps for hospitals, ambulatory surgery centers (ASCs), and sterile processing teams.
What Is AAMI ST108?
AAMI ST108 defines the quality and control of water and steam used in medical device processing. It establishes requirements for:
- Chemical and Microbial Limits
- Endotoxin Control
- Monitoring and Testing
- System Validation
- Documentation and Governance
Unlike earlier guidance such as AAMI TIR34, ST108 is now a formal framework increasingly referenced during accreditation surveys.
Why ST108 Compliance Matters
Failure to comply with ST108 creates real risk across multiple areas:
Patient Safety Risks
-
Surgical Site Infections
-
Biofilm Containment
-
Endotoxin Exposure
- Sterilization Failure
Operational Risks
-
Instrument corrosion and replacement costs
-
Sterilizer Downtime
-
Procedure Delays
Regulatory & Legal Exposure
-
Accreditation findings
-
CMS-related Deficiencies
-
Increased Liability
- Sterilization Failure
Step-by-Step: How to Achieve ST108 Compliance
1. Establish a Water Quality Management Program
Every facility must create a formal, written ST108 program that includes:
- Defined water categories
- System mapping (source → treatment → use)
- Monitoring schedules
- Alert and action limits
- Corrective actions
- Assigned responsibilities
Use our ST108 Survey Readiness Checklist to assess your current program.
2. Understand and Define Water Types
ST108 defines three water categories:
- Utility Water
- Critical Water
- Steam
Each has different uses and quality requirements.
Read a full breakdown in Navigating AAMI ST108: Ensuring Water Quality Compliance in Healthcare and Hospitals.
Facilities must map each water type to its application and ensure compliance with required limits.
3. Validate Your Water Treatment System
A compliant system typically includes:
- Pretreatment (softeners, carbon filtration)
- Reverse osmosis (RO)
- Optional deionization (DI)
- Closed storage tank
- Recirculating loop
Learn more about Critical Water System Design and Best Practices.
Key risks to address:
- Biofilm formation
- Stagnation
- Lack of recirculation
- Poor system validation
4. Implement Routine Testing and Monitoring
ST108 requires ongoing monitoring — not one-time validation.
Typical frequency:
- Utility water: quarterly
- Critical water: monthly + daily conductivity
- Steam condensate: quarterly
Parameters include:
- Conductivity
- Hardness
- Microbial counts
- Endotoxin (critical water)
- Steam condensate chemistry
Common gap: Many facilities do not perform endotoxin testing.
5. Establish Excursion Management
When results fall outside limits, facilities must:
- Investigate root cause
- Assess impact on devices
- Implement corrective actions
- Retest and verify control
- Document everything
Simply retesting until passing results is not compliant.
6. Maintain Preventive Maintenance Programs
Water systems require continuous upkeep:
- Membrane replacement
- Filter changes
- UV system maintenance
- Tank sanitization
- Loop flushing
7. Ensure Cross-Department Governance
ST108 requires coordination across:
- Sterile Processing
- Facilities Engineering
- Infection Prevention
- Quality/Risk
See how organizations structure this in Apex Water Safety Tipsbook.
This is not a facilities-only issue — it is an enterprise risk responsibility.
8. Prepare for Accreditation Surveys
Surveyors expect:
- Water management plan
- Test logs and trend reports
- Corrective action documentation
- Staff knowledge
What ST108 Compliance Looks Like
A compliant facility demonstrates:
✔ Defined water categories
✔ Validated systems
✔ Routine monitoring and trending
✔ Documented corrective actions
✔ Cross-functional oversight
Common ST108 Compliance Gaps
Most facilities struggle with:
- No formal program
- No endotoxin testing
- No action limits
- No trend analysis
- No steam testing
- Poor documentation
Identify gaps quickly with our ST108 Survey Readiness Checklist
Final Thoughts: ST108 Is a Leadership Responsibility
ST108 represents a shift in how healthcare organizations manage water.
It is no longer:
- A utility
- A facilities-only issue
- A “set-it-and-forget-it” system
It is a patient safety system requiring active oversight.
Need Help Achieving ST108 Compliance?
Apex helps healthcare organizations:
- Assess compliance gaps
- Design water treatment systems
- Implement monitoring programs
- Prepare for surveys
Contact Us to speak with an expert.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is AAMI ST108?
AAMI ST108 is the national standard for water and steam quality used in the processing of reusable medical devices.
Who needs to comply with ST108?
Any healthcare facility that cleans, rinses, disinfects, or sterilizes reusable medical devices using water should follow ST108 requirements.
What are the three ST108 water types?
ST108 defines three categories: Utility Water, Critical Water, and Steam. Each has different uses, testing requirements, and quality limits.
How often should ST108 water testing be performed?
Utility water and steam condensate are typically tested quarterly, while critical water is typically tested monthly, with daily conductivity monitoring recommended.
What is the most common ST108 compliance gap?
Common gaps include no formal water quality management program, missing endotoxin testing, lack of defined action limits, poor trend analysis, and incomplete documentation.
Is ST108 required by CMS or accreditation bodies?
ST108 may not always be cited by name, but its expectations are increasingly enforced through accreditation and regulatory surveys under infection control and environment-of-care standards.
What should facilities do first to prepare for ST108 compliance?
Facilities should start with a gap assessment that reviews water systems, testing practices, documentation, corrective action procedures, and cross-department governance.