Protective Gear- Protecting Those Who Help and Heal
The right protective clothing offers healthcare workers and patients protection from high-consequence infectious diseases (HCIDs) like Corona Virus and Ebola. Competitive disposable protective clothing are simply chemical suits being marketed for healthcare use. They’re uncomfortably hot, and not designed to meet the latest safety requirements or your donning and doffing protocols. These disposable protective coveralls may not offer the protection you need against the most contagious threats.
Garments Customized for Medical Professionals
Our Protective Gear have been designed with extensive input from medical professionals and leading medical centers. The resulting design offers the features necessary for life-saving protection and ease in the donning and doffing procedure. Our products are preferred in real-world infectious disease scenarios for their better fit, performance, and protection against the most dangerous pathogens.
Comfortable, Reliable Protection
In addition to providing reliable protection, we engineer each of our garments for comfort and protection along with enhanced mobility.
Personal protective equipment (PPE) refers to protective clothing, helmets, gloves, face shields, goggles, facemasks and/or respirators or other equipment designed to protect the wearer from injury or the spread of infection or illness.
PPE is commonly used in health care settings such as hospitals, doctor’s offices and clinical labs. When used properly, PPE acts as a barrier between infectious materials such as viral and bacterial contaminants and your skin, mouth, nose, or eyes (mucous membranes). The barrier has the potential to block transmission of contaminants from blood, body fluids, or respiratory secretions. PPE may also protect patients who are at high risk for contracting infections through a surgical procedure or who have a medical condition, such as, an immunodeficiency, from being exposed to substances or potentially infectious material brought in by visitors and healthcare workers. When used properly and with other infection control practices such as hand-washing, using alcohol-based hand sanitizers, and covering coughs and sneezes, it minimizes the spread of infection from one person to another. Effective use of PPE includes properly removing and disposing of contaminated PPE to prevent exposing both the wearer and other people to infection.
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