Hospital-acquired infections are one of the biggest hidden challenges in modern healthcare. Even when hospitals are clean, dangerous microbes can still survive on surfaces like bed rails, medical tools, and door handles. Now, researchers from the University of Toronto have developed a new type of non-toxic surface coating that may significantly reduce this risk by stopping proteins—and therefore bacteria—from sticking in the first place. This innovation could change how we think about cleanliness in hospitals, moving from constant chemical disinfection to smarter, safer surfaces that naturally resist contamination. Why cleaning alone is not enough Right now, hospitals mainly rely on strong chemical disinfectants like bleach to kill germs on surfaces. This approach is effective, but it comes with serious drawbacks. Professor Kevin Golovin, who leads the Durable Repellent Engineered Advanced Materials (DREAM) Laboratory at the University of Toronto Engineering, explains the problem clear...