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Rancho Mission Viejo Biohazard Cleanup | |||||||
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888-431-7233![]() |
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April 18, 2010
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$999 maximum for most single death scenes.Glossary Biohazard as word - Unfriendly microorganisms - From Nature with no Change (Ebola) - From Nature with Change (HIV) - Respect for Viruses - Global Warming and Habitat - Disinfecting Interior Habitat - Uncovering Unknowns Biohazards have a long natural history. Their existence often predates any relationship with humanity. These "biohazards" existed in the wild long before making human contact. We learn important words in our relationship to nature and our use of the term biohazard. A miroorganism in the wild does not become a biohazard, if at all, until it threatens humans by infecting humans or their environment. So when a microorganism becomes a threat to human health, we call it a "biohazard." We know for certain that trillions of microorganisms exist. Only a very small fraction of microorganisms create health threats to humans. Unfriendly microorganisms existed before humanity. These microorganisms, like viruses and bacteria, threaten human health without ever changing. Just by what they do, they threaten us. By different routes they travel into human society. By way of other animals, insects, wind, water, and other natural sources, unfriendly microorganisms move about our society and individuals. Sometimes these microorganisms enter human society by way of human contact in the wild. Humans then transport these threatening microorganisms into society. Ebola, a virus, came to us in this way. Ebola sounds like a biohazard cleanup nightmare, and it is. It always has been, except it only recently came into contact with humanity. TOP Ebola existed on its own in the wild until humanity contaminated itself in the African wilderness. Ebola kills very quickly and death by Ebola has few equals. Not many viruses cause as much extreme pain as Ebola. Fortunately for humanity Ebola kill quickly. If it remained dormant for long periods of time it would join other deadly biohazards like HIV. Since Ebola's victims do not live long, like 3 or 4 days, they do not have an opportunity to infect many people. One would recognize an Ebola infected airline passenger instantly. We know from our institutions and medical workers that the virus responsible for Hepititis B causes the whites of human eyes to change to yellow. This indicate liver failure. So with Ebola and Hepatitis B, we know some viruses stand out at some point. Helpatitis B does take longer to show physical signs than Ebola. HIV exists because of a virus that came to humanity from wild habitat and changed its contents, more than likely. It remained in human populations and traveled throughout our modern world in days because of our globalized planet. HIV now exists as a plague. Biohazard cleanup techniques should be learned by everyone because of HIV. Not just HIV, but other viruses capable of contaminating large populations by stealth give cause for universal biohazard cleanup training. In fact, humanity needs to get serious about respecting potentially deadly viruses. In Guiana, for instance, many thousands of people suffer from HIV. We would think that these people would somehow cause others to avoid HIV related behavior, but not so. People in Guiana continue infecting one another with HIV by inappropriate contact. HIV plagues Guiana and will do so elsewhere as a result. Viruses mentioned above arose from human intrusion into wild habitat for viruses. Viruses like H1N1 become biohazard cleanup issues because they linger in human habitat. Neither HIV nor Ebola exist long without protective habitat. H!N!, a deadly flu virus, has survived in open conditions for up to 7 days. In fact, H1N1 survives on commonly used surfaces for as long as a week, an eternity for some viruses. Young people coming into contact with this virus have a greatest risk of illness and death. For this reason everyone needs some form of biohazard cleanup understanding. Biohazard cleanup ought to become a common phrase in the American and English lexicons. Put another way, using biohazard cleanup methodology must find its place in popular culture as a serious form of cleaning and decontamination. At this writing, "biohazard" has greater understanding as a popular band than a micro-organic life-form capable of causing illness and death. Before long cleaning occupations will need greater recognition for their part in public hygiene. Orange County biohazard cleanup now has more to do with bloodborne pathogen cleanup than other biohazards, generally speaking. This change serves an important purpose nicely, but it's too narrow for future biohazard developments. Expect a future promising to unleash plagues never before imagined because of global warming. TOP Global warming in the context of biohazard cleanup becomes important to those of us in the biohazard cleanup business. Because global warmth patterns now deposit greater amounts of moisture in the atmosphere, our air holds life-forms for longer periods of time. Conceivably, some airborne viruses like H1N! and tuberculosis, to name a couple, may adapt to warmer, moisture ladden climates. Biohazard's reach, their habitat, will expand. Other viruses yet to have names may soon join those with names as biohazards. Beside creating viral niches for common viruses existing as biohazards, there are other species to consider. Consider, for instance, cross-species adaption of viruses on a warmer earth. HIV, some believe, represents one such cross-species adaption of a virus. The poxes alone should cause us to take heed of biohazard cleanup's importance in its wider meaning. Not only should biohazard cleanup receive greater attention as a common task, but reducing habitat for common biohazards needs to become a common task for all. Waiting for biohazard cleanup technicians, janitors, custodians, and other cleaning trades people takes too much time. Like other viruses, poxes spread quickly and these adapt as well as jump from species to species. Think of chicken pox, monkey pox, horse pox, and other poxes. Destroying biohazardous conditions helps to ensure biohazard cleanup technicians meet fewer or no biohazards. Today we leave indoor environmental hygiene to air conditioning and heating system filters and typical building maintenance and cleaning. This will not do in the future. Benevolent but disinfecting enzymes and other organic chemicals have a place in public building hygiene. Expect green technologies to arise with two tasks. For a first task, create air filtering systems with decontaminating enzymes and chemical gases, like ozone. For a second task, run with little or no external energy sources. In this way 24/7 air filtration freed of external energy economies guarantees building owner's have no vested interest in cutting back on building disinfection equipment. Schools, hospitals and other public buildings require these green, disinfecting air filtration systems now. These systems must have public acceptance before a necessity for their existence arises. By that time it will be too late, at least in terms of public hygiene. Here's an unusual example of global warming's possible consequences for spreading of heretofore unknown viruses, or foremerly extinct viruses we might suppose. As the earth's temperature rises, 79,000 glaciers many begin to melt. Many have started. As a result artifacts from preivous, unknown societies and individuals begin to appear. Nature's lost life-forms also begin to appear. Because they've remained fairly well preserved under freezing ice, their biological structures remain intact in some cases. The possibility of viruses passings from these once covered artifacts and cadavers arises as birds and animals begin to feed on them. This idea, not fact, does carry some sense of concern when the consequences of releasing a virus into a species without immunity. Supposing another species becomes host to such a virus, will it cross to other species, like humanity? We can conjur up all sorts of virus senarios, and for the biohazard cleanup thinkers of the world, doing so makes a lot of sense. Of course science fiction writers do this type of thinking all the time. Michael Craigton, for one, follows these econological concepts in his writing.TOP The National Environmental Health Organization (NEHO) supports the idea that human created green house gases play a role in earth's warming temerature. Whether or not humanity actually plays a role in addinto to green house gases. Here we've gone beyound the scope of this Orange County biohazard cleanup web page. Suffice it to say current earth science indicates such a relationship. See biohazard cleanup and global warming for more on this. A modest concern here considers climate change and how it plays a role in the "resurgence and re-emergence of some diseases, especially vector-borne diseases (14-17)." Polkilothermic anthropods like mosquitoes and ticks threaten human populations with increased numbers as their habitat broadens with global change. We must remember that global warming means our atmosphere's lower 8 kilometers of earth's atmosphere has increased .6 centegrade in 50 years. TOP We expect warmer temperatures to increase vector-borne pathogens to increase with humity and warmth. Estimates for the increase of malaria-transmitting mosquitoes may have expanded by over 50 to 80 million cases by the end of the last century. Canada's warmer temperatures threaten to accelerate pathogen development by way of ticks. Populations of mice and deer have a potential to increase because of greater food availability. Candad's warmer winders kill of fewer rodents and deer, leaving humans with more exposure to viruses eminating from these populations of vector carriers. More than likely for most of the earth, warming may result in rapid and complex changes to ecosystems and to the landscape. Unforeseen changes in the ecology of infectious diseases may change too. TOP So in these ways terms like biohazard cleanup have a wider, deeper, broader meaning than we usually think about in blood cleanup. Because of threats in existence and those to arrive by nature's trespass into human society, and human society's trespass into nature, we must expect viral invasions. Likewise, because of cross-species' adapting by microorganisms that become biohazards, public hygiene must involve technologies not in existence. And last, because of global warming and it unforeseen influences on all biohazard forms of development and transmission, social control as well as social patterns for public hygiene will soon cause humanity's involvement in biohazard cleanup as we cannot imagine, yet. Eddie Evans - Crime Scene Cleanup ... |
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