Sklar Soak Disinfectant

Posted by admin | Infection Control | Monday 22 February 2010 2:06 pm

Sklar-Soak-Disinfectant

Disinfectant for Surgical Instruments – Glutaraldehyde Free

Three minutes is all it takes for Sklar Disinfectant™ to thoroughly clean and disinfect your facility’s medical and surgical equipment and surfaces. Use it in examination rooms, operating rooms, laboratories, and other patient care areas.

Sklar Disinfectant’s non-toxic formula is specifically formulated to prevent cross-contamination. Plus, it comes in easy-to-use spray bottles or refill containers.

For price quotes or samples, contact your Sklar Account Manager or your local Distributor Sales Representative today!

For More: Sklar Disinfectant MSDS


Stop A Killer In Its Tracks – H1N1

Posted by admin | Infection Control, Medical | Tuesday 9 February 2010 10:05 am

sklar-disinfectant

Stop A Killer In Its Tracks – H1N1 – Use Sklar Disinfectant™ for safe, effective elimination of bacteria including MRSA, and the H1N1 virus

Three minutes is all it takes for
Sklar Disinfectant™ to thoroughly clean and disinfect your facility’s medical and surgical equipment and surfaces. Use it in examination rooms, operating rooms, laboratories, and other patient care areas.Sklar Disinfectant’s non-toxic formula is specifically formulated to prevent cross-contamination. Plus, it comes in easy-to-use spray bottles or refill containers.

For price quotes or samples, contact your Sklar Account Manager or your local Distributor Sales Representative today!

Natural Astringents And Toners

Posted by admin | Infection Control | Wednesday 27 January 2010 10:21 am

Throughout your daily life, you can encounter many situations that may end in a cut or two. While there are numerous synthetic medications that have been created to help heal minor cuts and abrasions, if you have sensitive skin, or are trying to live an organic life, these creams and lotions can often be less than desirable. There are natural remedies you are able to use that can heal your cuts, but without various chemicals and other unnatural ingredients. Making a natural antiseptic salve is easy and will help heal your natural body with natural ingredients.

Some of the Natural Antiseptics:

1. Lemon

Lemon has antiseptic properties and contains compounds that have been studied for their effects on immune function and the lymphatic, circulatory, and digestive systems. It is antibacterial and is beneficial for the skin. To sterilise the air, simply add a few drops of lemon to a spray bottle. To purify soy or rice milk, simply add two drops of lemon. Lemon can be used to treat verrucas, insect bits, and tension headaches. It can also be used for sore throats, in pruritis of the scrotum, in uterine haemmorhage after delivery, or as a lotion in sunburn.

2. Honey

Honey is a natural antiseptic and there are several studies on how honey has been used to treat wounds. Applying honey to wounds helps to prevent infections, as it contains antimicrobial agents that kill the bacteria in and around the wound. Many types of bacteria cannot survive in honey so the wound heals, swelling eases, and the tissues can regrow. Honey is also great for treating ulcers and burns. When treating diarrhea, honey promotes the rehydration of the body and more quickly clears the diarrhea and any vomiting and stomach upsets.

3. Pineapple

Pineapple is high in vitamins A, C, and B, and is rich in manganese, which is an essential part of certain enzymes that are necessary for metabolising proteins and carbohydrates. The pineapple enzyme, bromelain, is used for digesting proteins, and white it does so, it gives some effective anti-inflammatory benefits. It contains antibiotic properties and helps to enhance medical antibiotics. Pineapple is antiseptic and astringent. It reduces the acidity of urine, helps with normalising menstruation and can be used for abscesses, pneumonia, worm infestation, exhaustion, kidney infections, kidney stones, bronchitis, and digestive disorders. Pineapple also soothes sore throats.

4.Tea Tree Oil

Tea tree oil is a fantastic natural antibiotic and it contains antiseptic compounds that are a very effective skin disinfectant. Depending on the severity of the condition, it can be used at a strength of 5 to 15 percent daily. Tea tree oil has been proven to help with acne, athlete’s foot, ringworm, jock itch, fungal infections of the toe or finger nails, yeast infections, wound healing, and bad breath, amongst other things.

5. Grapefruit Seed Extract

Grapefruit seed extract is both antimicrobial and antiseptic. For use as an antiseptic, make a solution of 4 to 40 drops in water and apply to affected areas two or three times a day. It can be used as a spray on larger areas.

Disinfectant Spray Use On the Rise

Posted by admin | Infection Control | Monday 7 December 2009 11:36 am

H1N1 is certainly making disinfectant sprays and hand sanitizers popular these days.  In this excerpt from the LA Times, we learn that disinfectant supplies are in full production mode this December.

Original Source: Los Angeles Times

Silvia Cordero eyed the row of disinfecting gels, soaps and hand sanitizers at a Rite Aid in Culver City with the intensity of a drill sergeant preparing troops for a skirmish with the H1N1 flu virus.

“They’re going in my car, in my desk at work and in my sons’ backpacks,” the 28-year-old said. “I don’t really like the way any of them feel on my skin, but they might help keep us healthy.”

Concerns about the contagiousness and severity of the H1N1 flu strain have generated a boom in the hand-sanitizer market. Sales of gels and wipes have soared 71% to $118.4 million in the 24 weeks that ended Oct. 3 from $69.4 million in the same period a year earlier, according to Nielsen Co.

Driven in large part by businesses seeking to protect employees and customers, sanitizers helped boost earnings at bleach maker Clorox Co. and were a bright spot in an otherwise difficult period for Johnson & Johnson, whose Purell subsidiary is one of the main producers of alcohol-based gel cleaners.

Demand for anti-virus products also has spawned a cottage industry in personalized sanitizers. Consumers can go online and order them in fur-trimmed pump bottles or in containers printed with their company names. Pier 1 Imports is selling holiday-themed sanitizers with such scents as cinnamon and cilantro, packaged as nicely as perfumes.

One Internet start-up is getting so many orders for its disinfecting products that suppliers can’t keep pace.

“Everything you touch has germs,” said Carol Lewis, 65, of Los Angeles, who keeps hand sanitizers in her purse, in her car and at home because of concerns about catching H1N1, also called swine flu. “I don’t know if it’s going to protect me but, psychologically, it helps.”

About a third of businesses are taking precautions against H1N1, about the same number that prepared for Avian flu and SARS when those viruses erupted in Asia, according to a recent survey by the consulting company Challenger, Gray & Christmas Inc. But unlike those earlier epidemics, the H1N1 pandemic has hit worldwide — and sanitizers and disinfectants seem to be popping up all over.

Walt Disney Co. said this week that it added more than 60 bulk sanitizer dispensers at its Anaheim and Orlando, Fla., theme parks. The sanitizers are at park entrances, hotel lobbies and areas where visitors meet their favorite Disney characters.

Ventura Transfer Co., a Long Beach trucking and storage company, furnished all employees with hand sanitizers and stocked up on combined respirator-face masks.

“We have an obligation to provide our customers with an assurance that we can maintain functionality, that we will be able to handle their products the way they expect them to be handled,” safety manager Jim Cheney said.

Bottles of Purell sanitizer sit on every desk at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, where signs pronouncing “clean hands save lives” greet visitors at every turn. The hospital complex has been ordering about 580 gallons of the clear gel a month, nearly twice the amount that it used before the spread of H1N1.

“You can’t really turn around here without seeing Purell,” said Rekha Murthy, Cedars-Sinai’s director of hospital epidemiology.

At the Creative Center for Children, a preschool in Westwood, doorknobs are cleaned with disinfectant wipes every 90 minutes. So are tabletops in common areas.

Crossroads School in Santa Monica is taking similar steps.

“Our facilities department is cleaning twice daily, paying special attention to doorknobs, handles, railings and other surfaces frequently touched by multiple people,” said a recent e-mail to parents.

Wall Street analysts such as Nik Modi of UBS are telling investors that H1N1 is giving disinfectant businesses a boost.

“H1N1, that’s the name of the game,” Modi said.  Continued…

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