Tag Archives: facility management

It’s bad enough that the dental profession has been called the most dangerous by the U.S. Department of Labor, now it has to contend with another problem: Silicosis.

Silicosis is something more closely related to the construction industry, where workers breathe in silica dust from construction materials. It results in the scarring of lung tissue from the silica dust, and produces symptoms like coughing, wheezing, sharp chest pains and even fevers. Left untreated, it results in difficulty breathing and even death.

Silicosis is something more closely related to the construction industry, where workers breathe in silica dust from construction materials

So how does the dental profession also suffer from a malady that most often affects rock miners, stone cutters and heavy construction personnel? Seems the grinding that occurs in dental labs and in dental offices produces the same dusty environment. But where construction workers wear elaborate rebreathers to protect against inhaling dust, dental professionals often are left only with surgical masks—or nothing at all.

According to the Centers for Disease Control’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Reports (MMWR), research into occupational illness uncovered nine cases where dental professionals had silicosis from long-term exposure—and in some cases, the individuals died from respiratory failure. The MMWR noted that exposure to silica dust in dental labs can occur from mixing powders, removing castings from molds, polishing castings and using silica sand for abrasive blasting and sanding.

Silicosis is something more closely related to the construction industry, where workers breathe in silica dust from construction materials

One way to protect against silicosis is by focusing on air hygiene—scrubbing indoor air of harmful contaminants. AeraMax Professional commercial-grade air purifiers do just that—eliminating up to 99.97 percent of harmful pollutants like germs, dust, allergens, viruses, volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and odors from enclosed spaces, using hospital-like True HEPA filtration that efficiently and effectively cleans the air.

Using AeraMax Professional air purifiers significantly reduce particulate from indoor air, ensuring that dental lab workers needn’t worry about the hazards of working in lab settings. What’s more, with AeraMax Professional’s PureView technology, occupants can see the purifier’s work in removing particulate from the air.

PureView uses an innovative EnviroSmart 2.0 technology, which employs sensors to scan and analyze a room, activating the air purification system when contaminants are present. Because each unit has a large digital display, occupants can see the cleaning progress.

When cleaning begins, the display announces it in bold letters and cycles through a purification process. As the AeraMax Professional air purifier continues removing particulates from the air, the display will show a readout of the percentage of particles captured. Also, the display offers a visual readout of VOCs and odors in the air to let occupants know the contaminants are being removed.

AeraMax Professional had a great chance to spread the Gospel of Clean Air when it was invited to shed light on air purity challenges in the dental lab industry during a two-part interview featured on the Voices from the Bench podcast recently. Voices from the Bench, hosted by industry professionals Elvis Dahl and Barbara Warner Wojdan, explores a variety of dental lab topics, ranging from emerging technologies to industry news.

AeraMax Professional sheds light on air purity challenges in the dental lab industry.

 

For a two-part interview (episodes 25 and 26, available here) ), the pair created a roundtable with Tad Friess of Rockert Dental Labs, Mike Booth, AeraMax’s Senior Global Market Manager—Air Treatment, and Blake Bobosky, AeraMax’s VP/GM of Air Treatment Sales, North America. The group discusses the challenges facing dental lab owners and employees who work in dust- and odor-filled environments. Friess also recounted the work done by staff at AeraMax Professional to identify previous poor air quality issues at his lab, as well as the solutions provided through the installation of AeraMax Professional air purification units, stating that the installation completely eradicated the dust and air quality issues.

LISTEN HERE:

Part 1

Part 2

These days, facility managers have more responsibilities. More occupant interaction, more belt-tightening decisions—and more opportunities to truly affect change in their facility. This is why the director of the Healthy Buildings Program at the Harvard Center for Health and the Global Environment, Joseph Allen, Ph.D., stated that a facility manager has more of an impact in the health and well-being of the occupants than physicians.

Find out more about how you can clean smarter, not harder.

Facility managers and other building and corporate executives focused on achieving and sustaining clean workplace environments can visit with the AeraMax Professional team at three shows in October.

2015 IFMA World Workplace, Denver, Oct. 6-9

Stop by booth #307 at the 2015 International Facility Management Association’s World Workplace to learn more about improving indoor air quality to create healthier, cleaner facilities and to have a chance to win an AeraMax Professional commercial-grade air purifier for your facility!

Answer a quick five question survey about your facility cleaning practices and you can register to win a unit. One AeraMax Professional unit will be given out each day.

Witness commercial grade air purifiers in action as a particle counter measures the airborne contaminants in the ambient air and watch the particle count drop as the air is cleaned.

The show, which celebrates the 35th anniversary of the association and serves as the annual conference, is the go-to venue for facility managers to network, collaborate and discuss the future of sustainable facility management.

PCAPPA 2015, Portland, OR, Oct. 11-13

PCAPPA 2015 is the premier event for education facility managers in the Pacific Coast region. At booth #16, learn how AeraMax Professional can help you deliver a cleaner facility and set students up for success!

For example, AeraMax Professional helped Hinsdale Middle School solve several independent air quality issues that spanned a science lab, art room and classroom.

ISSA/Interclean North America, Las Vegas, Oct. 20-23

Billed as “the one show for facility solutions,” ISSA/Interclean is the perfect chance to learn how improving indoor air quality makes facilities cleaner. AeraMax Professional will be located at booth #3767. As at the IFMA show, you can take a survey and register to win an AeraMax Professional. You can check out the particle counter in action as well.

At the show, the AeraMax Professional team will discuss the flu season special report as well as how to improve air quality in a variety of settings.

 

Flu prevention: Why traditional methods aren’t enough

While experts have always advocated the flu shot as a means for flu prevention, especially for children and seniors, the 2014-15 vaccine was only 19 percent effective, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Though the vaccine had one of the lowest efficacies in the past decade, this statistic reveals that vaccination alone cannot mitigate the harmful effects of flu season. It’s necessary, but not comprehensive. Surface cleaning and handwashing aren’t enough to stop the flu from spreading either, because the main route by which the flu passes from person to person is the air.

To really reduce the burden caused by flu season, cleaning indoor air is essential.

If you’re taking a sick day, it’s too late

People with the flu often stay home from school or work to prevent the virus from spreading, but unfortunately an infected person is contagious before symptoms are in full effect. One sneeze or cough can send thousands of infectious particles into the air. Most of these small particles remain in the air for hours and travel long distances.

In fact, some of these particles can even travel through a building’s HVAC system, according to an official position statement released by ASHRAE.

This means that an infected individual could be long gone from a room by the time he or she transmits the influenza virus. To prevent this from occurring, facility managers need to remove infectious particles from shared airspace.

Fighting back against the flu

As more people catch the flu, the presence of airborne infectious particles quickly multiplies, especially in common areas such as schools and offices. Since these particles spread the virus by being inhaled, it doesn’t matter how much occupants wash their hands or clean off surfaces.

This is where commercial air purifiers come into play. AeraMax Professional air purifiers effectively eliminate 99.9 percent of infectious influenza particles from shared air in only 35 minutes.

In a special report, AeraMax Professional sheds light on the flu and explains how its targeted solution creates healthier and cleaner facilities.