Showing posts with label General Message. Show all posts
Showing posts with label General Message. Show all posts

Monday, November 23, 2009

Wyndam Hotels Fight the Spread of Germs

Wyndham Hotels is doing its part to fight flu and colds!
The chain teamed up with Bath & Body Works to give away free bottles of the retailer’s Deep Cleansing Hand Gel to arriving guests at 12 airport hotels.Calling it part of its “Be Well” philosophy, the hotel chain says it hopes the gesture can mitigate the risk of guests contracting flu or cold or spreading their own illnesses to others.The pocket-sized bottles are available in two fragrances—Warm Vanilla Sugar and Coconut Lime Verbana—or unscented. Guests also receive a coupon for a free antibacterial item of choice when they make a purchase of $10 or more at a Bath & Body Works story.Wyndham also features Bath & Body Works’ True Blu spa line of amenities in all its guestrooms.

Monday, September 28, 2009

Visit Our Website

For ordering info and other information, don't forget to visit us online at www.germfreeremotes.com!

Protect Yourself Against ALL Infectious Diseases!

With all of the hubub regarding the flu and the swine flu, it's easy to forget that there are plenty of other illnesses out there. Some other common cold-weather ailments include:

  • Cold- Colds are caused by a virus that infects the nose, sinuses, throat, and airways, and they're often spread through contact with mucus. Symptoms include sneezing, a stuffy and/or runny nose, coughing, scratchy sore throat, and red, watery eyes. Other signs: chills, aches, a mild fever, and swollen lymph glands. Since colds are viral infections, there's no ideal treatment, but fluids and rest, plus decongestants, cough syrups, and antihistamines, can help ease symptoms.
  • Bronchitis- More than 25% of those affected by acute bronchitis each year are children; it's most common in kids under 5. The illness, an inflammation of the airways, is usually caused by viruses, bacteria, or allergies. Symptoms include difficulty breathing and a severe cough that may last several weeks. Also possibly a slight fever that in severe cases will spike to above 102°. Treatment for bronchitis is rest and fluids, though antibiotics can help if the infection is bacterial. Medication can suppress a dry cough, but if the cough produces phlegm, talk to your pediatrician about giving a syrup with an expectorant to make it easier for your child to bring up the sputum. Acetaminophen or ibuprofen can reduce fever and aches, and cool-mist humidifiers or steam vaporizers can help ease breathing.
  • Sinusitis- About 10% of colds each year develop into sinusitis, an inflammation of the lining of the sinuses that's usually caused by allergies or another infection. Symptoms include nasal congestion and thick nasal discharge, as well as pain, tenderness, swelling, and pressure around the nose. Sinusitis can cause a persistent cough, sore throat, or bad breath. If the infection spreads, it can lead to fever and chills. Treatment is usually a 21-day course of antibiotics. Over-the-counter decongestant nasal sprays can be used for up to three days; after that, they can cause the nasal passages to swell and might actually worsen symptoms. Use antihistamines to reduce allergy symptoms and acetaminophen or ibuprofen for fever and aches. Cool-mist humidifiers and steam vaporizers can make breathing easier.
  • Strep Throat- While most expect doctors to prescribe antibiotics for sore throats, streptococcal bacteria cause only about 15 to 25 percent of sore throats; the remainder are caused by respiratory viruses, which are unresponsive to antibiotics. No physician can consistently distinguish between streptococcal pharyngitis and sore throats caused by viruses based on physical examination alone. If you suspect you may strep throat, you should have their throats swabbed to determine if streptococcal bacteria are present.

Germ Free Remotes bags would help protect you and your family from all of these illnessess, as well as the flu and the HINI.

Source Source

Monday, September 21, 2009

H1N1 Now In Schools!

"The pending return of the H1N1 swine flu to the northern hemisphere is driving American schools to prepare for the worst. One school is attempting to ban touch among students."

Source

Until the vaccination comes out (rumored to be October 2009) your best bet for protecting yourself and your family, including school-aged children, is still constant hand-washing. Check out this site for more tips to help protect your health: http://pandemicflu.gov/individualfamily/prevention/index.html

With H1N1 now in schools, Germ Free Remote covers on all A/V equipment could protect a lot of students from getting infected!

Monday, September 14, 2009

Avoid the Flu by Killing Germs on Hidden Surfaces

It's that time of year again! The dreaded FLU SEASON. You have two options: get a flu shot, or take your chances. Making small changes, like using a Germ Free Remotes bag on remotes at hotels or hospitals, can greatly reduce your risk of infection. If you have a large family, particularly young children in school, then you know how often germs are shared. Investing in Germ Free Remotes bags for your home could help keep everyone happy & healthy. Check out our source (linked below) for more tips on how to stay healthy throughout flu season.

Source

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

New Study Finds Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria on Remote Controls













A recent University of Arizona TV Remote Control Study, by Dr. Chuck Gerba, ranks the TV remote control as holding the highest level of bacteria in a patient's hospital room. The bacteria can lead to Nosocomial Infection, or hospital-acquired infection.

Among the bacteria found, MRSA the dangerous antibiotic-resistant bacteria were only discovered on the remote controls. There were no traces of it on any other objects tested.


The Study was conducted in June, July and August 2005. The study involved 15 hospital rooms to determine if the greatest number of bacteria in a patient's room occurs on the remote control.

Study Results
-The average total bacteria on the remote controls was 320.
-The average total bacteria on sites in the hospital room was 91.
-The average total bacteria on newly opened disposable remotes was 8.35. There was no detection of Staphylococcus Aureus on newly opened disposable remotes.
-MRSA bacteria were present on television remote controls in patient hospital rooms.

Note: Each remote was tested after the patient was released and the patient room was cleaned.

Staggering Statistics
-Nosocomial Infection - Hospital-Acquired Infections
-More than 2 million Americans acquire hospital-related infections each year.
-Almost 90,000 deaths are reported each year due to nosocomial infections.
-Patients with Staph infections spend an average of 14 days in the hospital compared to other patients.
-Each year, patients with hospital-acquired infections increase hospital bills by more than $9.5 billion

Don't take a change- use a new Germ Free Remotes bag each time to take care of this problem before it even starts!

Source

Monday, August 31, 2009

WHO Warns of 2nd Wave of Swine Flu

The World Health Organization is warning of a possible 2nd wave of the H1N1 virus.

There are various ways you can protect yourself from this, including protecting yourself from germs. Antibacterial soaps are sure to be in high demand, so stock up now. Germ Free Remote covers are a great way to avoid germs on remote control covers in hotels, hospitals, etc. Next time you are in a hotel room, imagine how many people have touched the remote control before you. Wouldn't it be nice to have some assurance you aren't bringing dangerous germs, like H1N1, home to your family and friends?

Source

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Germs Are Everywhere - Really

As you hit the road for summer travel, get in touch with those unsuspected surfaces that are breeding grounds for illness.

By Sid Kirchheimer WebMD Feature
Reviewed By Brunilda Nazario


Besides providing a healthy renewal of mind and spirit, a summer vacation makes good antimicrobial sense, especially when you consider that typical workplace desktop has more germs than a public toilet seat.
But let's face it, when you hit the road for your weeklong escape, those kids arguing in the backseat or giant rodents posing for photos at theme parks aren't going to be your only travel companions. There are zillions of germs living on the umpteen surfaces you touch.
And they don't take a vacation, even when you do.
That could explain why 80% of infections are spread the same way: Someone touches a germ-ridden surface. Or someone infected by germ particles from a sneeze, a cough, or a touch -- gets the infectious bug onto their hands.

What's In a Touch?

"Whether germs are viral, bacterial, or fungal, some can remain active on most surfaces for several days -- no matter whether the surface is stainless steel, wood, plastic, or even the paper in a magazine," says Elaine Jong, MD, co-director of the University of Washington Travel Clinic in Seattle.
When you touch that surface, it's transmitted to your hands. Then if you touch your eyes or rub their nose or lips, when you eat or in any way get your fingers in contact with a mucous surface, voila ... you have infected yourself."
The best way to prevent problems, of course, is to never touch these "problem" surfaces. But that's not so easy.
"The funny thing is, what many people consider to be the germiest surfaces may not be so bad, while some of the most germ-ridden areas are not what most people expect," says University of Arizona microbiologist Charles Gerba, PhD, a leading researcher better known in the science world as "Dr. Germ."

Popular Opinion, Scientific Reality

For instance, Gerba recently completed a survey of 1,000 people -- getting their opinions of where the germs collect in full force, boosting their risk for infection, and compared those opinions to the evidence he's collected in thousands of germ samples.
"Most people consider Port-a-Potties and other public toilets to be the worst places in terms of surface germs. But in reality, they don't even come close to what you'll find on ATM machines, phone receivers, and elevator buttons," he tells WebMD. "That's because those toilets are cleaned and disinfected regularly. But when was the last time a typical phone or buttons on an ATM machine or elevators were?"
Of course, germs are everywhere -- and the key to removing them is with a regular cleaning (soap and clean water) and disinfecting. And because this one-two punch isn't done on many public surfaces, Gerba notes that some of the germiest places you'll likely encounter this summer include:

  • Picnic tables. "They are never cleaned or disinfected and birds like to roost on them, especially on picnic tables near a pond or in the shade," says Gerba, a professor of environmental microbiology who has collected thousands of germ concentration samples for dozens of studies. "You should never eat from a picnic table, or even touch the surface, unless you have your own tablecloth."
  • Playgrounds. "Some are even worse than picnic tables, and that's pretty bad -- and the monkey bars tend to be the very germiest place," he says. "That's because they're primarily used by small children who rarely wash their hands and run around with colds." Especially avoid tables and benches, where diaper changes are often done, he advises.
  • Airport bathrooms. The problem isn't that airport bathrooms aren't cleaned and disinfected -- they are. "It's that so many people use the bathrooms as soon as they leave the place that janitors just can't keep up with the influx of germs from around the world."
    What may surprise you, however, is which part of airport bathrooms are the worst: "The faucet area is the dirtiest and the place that some people worry about most -- the doorknobs -- typically are cleanest," he says.
    And the toilet seats? Because they lack the moisture than helps germs thrive, they have fewer germs than faucets. "My advice is to always use the end stalls, whether at the airport or any other public bathroom," says Gerba. "Most people use the middle stalls, so they tend to be the germiest." In his studies, the stall that is farthest left (as you face the stalls) has the fewest germs because it's used less than those on the right end.
  • Hotel rooms. As a general rule, the higher the price the cleaner the room. "I did a study about seven years that found if you paid more than $50 a night, there was a much greater chance that the room was regularly disinfected," he tells WebMD. "Rooms under $50 weren't." But no matter the price, the single place where you'll find the most surface germs: the TV remote. "It's never cleaned," he says.

The Germ-Friendly Skies?

But what is the single germiest place posing the biggest risk of a hand-transmitted illness?
"I might have to go with airline bathrooms," says Gerba. "Before 9/11, I used to sample airplane bathrooms a lot, and I always found E. coli traces -- usually on the faucets and nearly 100% of the time on the door handles."
The reason: "About 50 people per flight use a toilet and if you ever tried to wash your hands in that tiny sink, you'll know it's pretty hard," he says. "To make matters worse, airplane bathrooms are rarely disinfected between flights."
Don't expect that holding it in will protect you.
"Studies show there are more germs in the air inside an airplane during daytime flights than during nighttime flights," says Jong, author of The Travel and Tropical Medicine Handbook and clinical professor of internal medicine at the University of Washington Medical School.
"When people walk in the aisles of a plane, it kicks up a lot of dust. Conversely, during red eye and nighttime flights, particle count goes down because there is less activity." Other germ-ridden surfaces on planes: the tray counters, seat armrests, and even magazines.

Portable Protection

That's why she and Gerba suggest that no matter what your travel destination is this summer, you should pack plenty of soap, alcohol swabs, or easy-to-use gel sanitizers.
"And use them," Jong tells WebMD. "You should wash your hands frequently and always before you prepare to eat food or touch your eyes, nose, and mouth. Personally, when I'm on a plane, I wipe the area around my seat with a gel sanitizer when I board, and also use them on my hands after I touch a strange surface. Keeping your hands clean is the best way to avoid becoming sick from these kinds of germs."

Published July 12, 2004.

SOURCES: Elaine Jong, MD, clinical professor of internal medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle; and co-director, University of Washington Travel Clinic; and author, The Travel and Tropical Medicine Handbook. Charles Gerba, PhD, professor of environmental microbiology, the University of Arizona, Tucson.
©1996-2005
WebMD Inc. All rights reserved.

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Also visit our website at
http://www.germfreeremotes.com/!

Welcome Message!

Thank you for visiting Germ Free Remotes. Our team realized the importance of keeping germs from spreading though remote controls. The average number of bacteria on a typical remote control is 320, and remotes have higher levels of bacteria than any other object in hotel and hospital rooms. A large number of the population is now concerned with catching germs. Hotel chains and hospital management have taken notice and are now doing their part to keep guests safe and comfortable to ensure they return to the establishment again.

The following are a few examples of how Germ Free Remotes adds value:
  • Each bag is custom fit for your hotels remote control
  • Extremely low cost per bag
  • Staff and Housekeeping can apply without problem
  • Clients can avoiding spreading germs by never having to touch the remote control
  • Adds extra protection from spills on controls and prevents having to replace remotes
  • Germ Free Remotes are made from a biodegradable material so they are Earth friendly
  • Every bag comes with your hotel's custom logo
  • Saves money on replacing battery covers and lost batteries

The Germ Free Remotes solution will simply let your clients know you care about their health and well-being. The simple gesture of stopping the spread of germs goes a long way.