Archive for October, 2008
Don’t Get Your Clean Hands Dirty
October 17, 2008
Public bathrooms can vary in cleanliness, but for the most part are a breeding ground for harmful germs and bacteria. Touching the door handles, flush handles and faucets spreads and picks up germs that can make you sick. It’s usually necessary to touch the faucet in order to wash your hands. But this isn’t the case with automatic faucets.
Automatic faucets turn on when a person holds their hands underneath the spout. The water comes out and the faucet turns off when the person removes their hands. These faucets help keep hands clean and avoid germ contact. Automatic faucets are available for commercial and home use.
Picking Up After PIgs
October 17, 2008
Some jobs are tougher than others. Working on a farm is one of those. Since I was a freshman in high school I have spent every summer working on my uncle’s pig farm. He and his wife own a 6,000-acre farm with more than 800 pigs. They raise the pigs to slaughter for ham, bacon and many other pork products. Raising pigs demands a lot of clean up.
That’s where I come in; I have to clean out all of the piglet’s stalls. The little ones are separated from the adults at birth because adult male pigs are aggressive towards younger males. Those piglets make quite and mess and stink! I start be shoveling out their pens, then I spray down the floor, and finally, I add more hay for them to nest in. I get so dirty sometimes that it’s hard to scrub off in the shower. I don’t know what I would do if I didn’t have sanitary gloves to wear at work.
GLOBAL HANDWASHING DAY
October 15, 2008
Today October 15 has been declared Global Handwashing Day. This should go a long way in stressing handwashing to prevent cross-contamination and illness.
Types Of Hands Free Door Openers
October 11, 2008
Who doesn’t have to use a public restroom at one time or another? The answer is just about everyone or We The Public. We have become more aware of germs in restrooms probably because of the threat of MRSA, the methicillin resistant staph aureus, bacteria. After washing our hands and drying them, it becomes apparent that we then have to exit by touching the door. Technology has solved that problem by providing us with a variety of touch free devices that can open doors for us. Some facilities like airports and movie theatres have eliminated doors altogether by installing the “S” curve entry and exit.
Motion sensors and remote controls are automated answers to the hands free door opener. There is also a method that uses a foot bracket on the door bottom whereby one can step and pull the door. Arm grasping handles attached to doors avoid hand contact thereby preventing cross-contamination. Exiting a public restroom is the weak link in the chain of hygiene. A hands free door opener is the solution.
Signs And Symptoms Of MRSA Infection
October 2, 2008
Most MRSA infections produce the following symptoms
Cellulitis- Infection of the skin or underlying tissue. Small, red bumps.
Boils- Pus- filled infections of hair follicles
Sty-Eyelid gland infection
Abcess-Pus collections under the skin
Impetigo-A skin infection with pus- filled blisters
Carbuncles-larger than an abcess, usually with several openings to the skin
Disinfectant wipes can be used to kill MRSA
MRSA Methicillin-resistant Staph Aureus
October 2, 2008
MRSA is a bacterium belonging to a group known as Staphylococci. It is re
sistant to an many antibiotics and can cause serious illness requiring hospital treatment. According to the to the CDC ( Center for Disease Control) , there were 94,000 MRSA cases in 2005 and killed 19,000..
About 30% of people have harmless Staph within the nose, and only !% of people have MRSA.
MRSA infections commonly occur in hospitals and health care settings. But now the CDC estimateses that 12% of infections are community associated (CA-MRSA). Skin to skin contact with mats and gymm gym equipment is contributing to the spread of MRSA in public gyms.
Handwashing and the use of touchless towel dispensers and door openers prevent contamination
with this “superbug”.
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