Many of our commercial clients are in the midst of reopening; here's where we can help.
As part of our ongoing service, we wipe cleared surfaces of furniture and fixtures, as well as touchpoints, with a hydrogen peroxide based cleaner/sanitizer, being careful to allow the required dwell time; it's quite effective against viruses. A good follow up is to spray most everything with a hospital-grade disinfectant (we like Johnson/Diversey's quat based Virex256), giving ample dwell time (wet).
If you are concerned about latent viruses in your facility prior to reopening, or have had one of your folks confirmed or suspected with Covid-19, that second hit might be a good idea. Now that we've trained and equipped our techs, we can work quite efficiently, and keep the cost down. Happy to talk with you about our coronavirus disinfection services (COVID-19 Decontamination or remediation service) - much more than just a "deep clean".
Part of the International Sanitary Supply Association is the Global Biorisk Advisory Council; they've developed quite a good facility accreditation program. Just looking at it can help. Here's a link.
In passing, one other thing you might look at, that I've only recently seen anyone mention, is asking your folks to close the toilet seat lid before flushing. An infected person expels enough viruses that Arizona State University researchers have been tracking viral hotspots by measuring Covid-19 in the sewers. When you flush, the force of the flush sends a plume of very fine droplets (likely infected) for some yards. And, the finer droplets can hang in the air long-term. Fancy modern low water use toilets use more water pressure than the old fashioned kind, and thus propel droplets even more effectively.
Closing the lid helps; if you have a fancy modern toilet with no lid, might see if there is an easy way to add one.
And please call me if we can help, with a reopening, or if you've had a close encounter with the virus.
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