As we face the uncertainty and impact brought about by the Coronavirus (COVID-19), we urge you to stay informed. Cleaning and maintenance protocol is often a concern and difficult to enforce. Now, more than ever, it is critical to ensure you have implemented the most effective cleaning regimes.
The study mentioned below gives some useful insight into managing COVID-191.
Viral shedding refers to the release of infectious viral particles from someone who is currently carrying the virus. It is the means by which the virus spreads from person to person. At present, evidence suggests that COVID-19 sheds differently to the SARs or MERs viruses. With SARs and MERs, peak shedding only occurred later in the illness when that virus had moved deeper into the lungs. But early evidence suggests that COVID-19 sheds from the earliest point in the illness, when people may still have very mild (or no) symptoms and are still going about their daily routines. It appears that in most cases, viral shedding then drops after about day 5 of the illness, unless the illness gets progressively worse.1
Viral shedding like that displayed by COVID 19, from the upper airway early in the illness, makes it very hard to contain. As a result, a serious and important onus rests on healthcare, education, retail and commercial environments to implement strict infection control regimes, wherever possible, to help prevent the spread of the virus.1
COVID -19 appears to be able to spread in 3 ways:
A small study published last week noted that if infection control is poor, COVID-19 can survive for:
Remember disinfecting is DIFFERENT to cleaning
It is critical to remember that cleaning and disinfecting are two entirely different processes and should be treated as such in effective infection control.
Cleaning removes germs, dirt, and impurities from surfaces or objects. Cleaning works by using soap (or detergent) and water to physically remove germs from surfaces. This process does not necessarily kill germs, but by removing them, it lowers their numbers and the risk of spreading infection.
Disinfecting kills germs on surfaces or objects. Disinfecting works by using chemicals to kill germs on surfaces or objects. This process does not necessarily clean dirty surfaces or remove germs, but by killing germs on a surface after cleaning, it can further lower the risk of spreading infection.
Both processes play an important role and a good infection control regime should always clean and disinfect surfaces separately.
How a PUR-coated vinyl floor covering can improve infection control3
The types of cleaning routines that work best on vinyl floors3
Infection control has also been carefully considered in our Gradus wall protection range. SureProtect Pure adheres to strict infection prevention and control guidelines and has the quality and design finishes and fittings that enable thorough access, cleaning and maintenance to take place.
For any help or information on maintaining or implementing effective disinfection routines on the Polyflor range, please contact marketing@polyflor.co.za or Blythe on 011 609 3500.
For more flooring tips and tricks, and expert advice on how to maintain and clean your vinyl floors, subscribe to our Polyflor Insights.
1. Woelfel, Roman, et al. Clinical Presentation and Virological Assessment of Hospitalized Cases of Coronavirus Disease 2019 in a Travel-Associated Transmission Cluster. preprint, Infectious Diseases (except HIV/AIDS), 8 Mar. 2020. DOI.org (Crossref), doi:10.1101/2020.03.05.20030502. Available at https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.03.05.20030502v1. Accessed 13 March 2020.
2. Van Doremanalen et al., March 2020. Aerosol and surface stability of HCoV-19 (SARS-CoV-2) compared to SARS-CoV-1 Available at https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.03.09.20033217v1.full.pdf. Accessed 16 March 2020
3. Polyflor UK Healthcare brochure 2017. Available at https://www.polyflor.com/jh/web.nsf/brochures/DC374C9D5C1AB51F802579C9003E7196/$file/Healthcare_Brochure_2017.pdf. Accessed 15 March 2020.