Cleanzine: your weekly cleaning and hygiene industry newsletter 10th October 2024 Issue no. 1133
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Splashback, urinals, and the Covid connection
The World Health Organisation reports that Coronavirus can spread in an infected person's urine. Referred to as 'viral shedding', this means that if traces of contaminated urine become aerosolised and inhaled, the disease can infect others in the washroom.
The setting in which this is most likely to happen is around urinals.
"The reason it is such a problem around urinals is due to the flushing of a traditional urinal and splashback," says Klaus Reichardt, CEO, and founder of Waterless Co.
To help prevent this and protect health, Klaus suggests building managers do the following:
- Increase urinal cleaning frequencies and make sure all surfaces surrounding the urinals are cleaned and disinfected.
- Block off every two urinals so there is more distance between urinal users
- If possible, reduce water flow rates; this will help reduce the pressure of the flush
- Have posters made encouraging men to urinate at a 90-degree angle. "Urinating in the water (at the base of the urinal) causes the most splatter and aerosolisation," says Klaus.
- Gentleman might consider sitting instead of standing; the stream is five times faster when standing at a urinal than when sitting in a toilet.
- Install waterless urinals; because there is no flush of water, aerosolisation is substantially eliminated.
- Use a paper towel to touch the flush handle
- To foster social distancing, place distancing markers on the floor behind the urinals.
- Place mats under urinals to absorb splatter and change them frequently
"In the past, the big problem with splashback is that if the pee puddles, for instance on floors, it breeds bacteria and is one of the reasons public restrooms can smell," adds Klaus.
"But now that bacteria may include the pathogens that cause Covid. This makes splashback a much more serious problem that must be addressed."
E: [email protected]
W: www.waterless.com
6th August 2020