DISINFECTION AND STERILIZATION: KNOW THE DIFFERENCE For a safer and purer process and manufacture in the pharmaceutical industry, decontamination is a crucial aspect. Since disinfection and sterilization are both decontamination processes, there still lies a major difference between both. In disinfection, the disinfectant solutions eliminate harmful microorganisms from inanimate objects and surfaces. But steam, ETO, Gamma and Dry Heat sterilization processes kill all the living microorganisms which also includes bacterial spores. While disinfection can be achieved by physical or chemical methods, sterilization can be achieved by physical, chemical and physiochemical means. Between disinfection and sterilization lies a vertical hierarchy orientation of the cleaning process- starting from the lowest, sanitization, disinfection with levels of classificationlow, intermediate and high level, decontamination, sterilization, depyrogenation and vapor phase hydrogen peroxide (VPHP). Sanitizing refers to significantly reducing vegetative bacterial cells wherein IPA could be efficiently sprayed over the operator’s gloves. As disinfection refers to eliminating harmful microorganisms from inanimate objects and surfaces, it has three levels of classification. A low-level disinfectant kills maximum vegetative bacteria and lipid or medium sized viruses. An intermediate-level disinfectant kills the entire group of microbial pathogens except bacterial endospores. Almost all microbial pathogens and some bacterial endospores are killed by high-level disinfectant, but it may not completely affect the large numbers of resistant bacterial endospores.