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Good hygiene isn't just for a pandemic!
It's well known that staff sickness costs UK business an enormous amount of money every year and good hygiene protocols can make all the difference. The key thing is using the right products and using them properly, something that unfortunately many companies overlook. We are always happy to help so if you want to make some positive changes and protect your staff and customers then drop us a line, even if its just for some advice (we don't charge for that!).email: info@serenityhygiene.com or give us a call on 0330 043 1029
Misinformation / Disinformation / Bad Information
Alcohol Sanitiser Deaths up by 157% in 2019/2020. The truth about alcohol vs alcohol free sanitisers
Serenity Hygiene attends the Health and Safety Event 2021
Serenity Hygiene helps WightFibre engineers stay safe
When the global COVID-19 pandemic struck, the Isle of Wight's own telecommunications provider, WightFibre, had a difficult task at hand; how to keep it's customers and engineers safe, while still being able to attend customer premises to maintain the island's critical telecommunications network. At a time when the network was being relied upon more than ever for vital business and personal communications, it was imperative that WightFibre engineers were able to perform their tasks without unnecessary risk. WightFibre Managing Director John Irvine explains further: "Since March our office staff have worked from home, but even before then we performed a Coronavirus risk assessment...
Viruses have always been with us, they always will be.
Dangerous and economically disruptive viruses have been with us a long time and there is no reason to suppose they will not continue to cause havoc far into the future. Just take the last two decades as a snapshot. This pandemic was inevitable and there is no excuse for planning to have been almost entirely absent. 2002: Between November 2002 and July 2003, severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) spread rapidly from China to 37 other countries around the world, causing 775 human deaths with an economic loss of $40 billion. 2009 Early 2009, a new strain of H1N1 of porcine...