INFECTION  PREVENTION & CONTROL

After every crisis nothing remains the same. This will be true even when the current emergency will be over. Every business will therefore inevitably have to learn to safely manage customers and restore confidence and trust.

  • Provide additional IPC measures to keep your customers as well as your staff safe and protected
  • Restore trust and confidence in your customers and employees setting sanitisation best standards
    and practices
  • Differentiate your business showing maximum attention to prevention and safety

OZONE IS THE ANSWER TO THE NEW SANITISATION STANDARDS

Moreover, recent evidence has shown how Coronaviruses (SARS-CoV-2 too) have the ability to circulate and persist in the air and not only through droplets. This has an enormous impact on the clinic’s air quality, especially at the end of a working day when it will result poor.

  • the greater the number of air changes per hour (ventilation rate), the sooner any aerosol will be cleared.
  • Where feasible, environmental decontamination should be performed: A minimum of 20 minutes, that is 2 air changes, in clinical settings where the majority of these procedures occur is considered pragmatic (UK GOV Transmission characteristics and principles of infection prevention and control).

IS OZONE SAFE?

Low ozone concentration, given the absence of danger to the respiratory tract, can be used during operational activity, so as to contain microbial contamination and viruses inactivation.

Higher concentration, which can be toxic, can instead be used for a profound sanitation of the environment during the hours of suspension of the operating activity or between patients.

OZONE IS COMPLETELY SAFE AND RESPECTS THE ENVIRONMENT

“Total sanitization of the clinic surfaces with the conventional procedures is not technically possible nor economically sustainable. The use of an active gas that can spread to all environments constitutes a formidable prospect.”

(Prof. Marco Montevecchi, DDS-Msc-PhD-Researcher, Clinica Odontoiatrica – Dept. di Scienze Biomediche e Neuromotorie – UniBo)”