Advert

MRSA Alerts

Google Analytics

« MRSA Symptoms now outside hospitals | Main | Rapid test promises effectiveness against MRSA: News from Acolyte Biomedica »

Air Managment could cut MRSA Infection

Link: A Breath of Fresh Air in the Fight for Clean Air.

A NEW air management system which kills an unprecedented 99.7% of airborne bacteria and viruses, including MRSA, Anthrax and Bird Flu, has been developed in the UK by Quest International.

Housed within a small unit similar to a standard air-conditioning unit, the AirManager kills contaminates in a single cycle, purifying air which could carry potentially fatal bacteria and viruses. The result is an environment free from bacteria and unpleasant odours wherever an AirManager system is installed.

David Hallam, Director of Research and Development at Quest said: “AirManager has so many applications that people in every field of life will benefit. Whether an environment suffers from unpleasant odours or more serious airborne particulates such as MRSA, AirManager cleanses the air and makes a room pleasant and, more importantly, safe to be in.”

The system has been developed over several years by Mr Hallam who was prompted to develop the system when an ailing relative, Uncle Tom, recovering from a colostomy left some unpleasant odours in the nursing home where he was a resident.

“The solution to Tom’s problem and that of his fellow residents was fairly simple,” said Mr Hallam, “but since then we have been developing the AirManager technology for a wide range of markets including food technology, laboratories, hospitals and healthcare, aviation and the military – in fact anywhere where you need a clean air environment.”

AirManager uses Closed Coupled Field Technology (CCFT) which can kill bacteria and other contaminates quickly whilst at the same time remaining harmless to people in the vicinity.

Comments

Post a comment

Image Ad

MRSA TV

  • How To Use This Site

    A short introduction from Dave Roberts

Please Note

  • The most recent version of this site is here

MRSA - Audio Introduction

  • This 12 minute introduction will help you grasp the key facts and the key issues surrounding drug resistant staph aureus (mersa, mursa)


Info