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San Diego Suicide Cleanup

Homicides - Suicides - Unattended Deaths

San Diego Suicide Cleanup

 

888-431-7233

 

 

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We are professional cleaners specializing in homicides, suicides, and unattended deaths. When biohazards appear in a home or business, our services return soiled environments to their pre-incident condition.

When it comes to professional cleaning for homicide, suicide, unattended death, and biohazards in general, know what you need. From Biosafe, San Diego residents and businesses can expect biohazard removal, decontamination, and encapsulation; ozone decontamination, chemical fogging decontamination reach those forgotten, unseen areas. Previously soiled areas are often sealed (entire rooms are also sealed as needed).
 
 

You need a professional cleaner with hundreds of death scene cleanups for homicide, suicide, and unattended deaths. You need a cleaner willing to stick around and properly apply ozone to decontaminate your dwelling or business. You need a cleanup that will include the decontamination of your property with chemicals from ceiling to floor, including all four walls. And then there's the problem of sealing the soiled areas; at times, the entire room needs sealing to help reduce or remove noxious odors from blood and death, miasma.

When you are ready for a professional cleaner that fits the discription above, call Eddie Evans and ask questions, ask for a quote over the telephone, and ask Eddie to come and clean for you. You will not be disappointed.





What about costs? You need to know that Eddie Evans cleans solo, alone. He has been doing this for years and expects to continue doing so for many more years. You can trust that Eddie will give a reasonable quote over the telephone. Expect Eddie to provide a "not-to-exceed" price, which means that once he gives his bid for your cleanup needs, expect that he will not play games with his price.

If and when Eddie wishes that he had asked for me, trust that he will not ask for more; he will work harder and continue to add value to his cleaning tasks. In this way his reputation as a professional cleaner remains secure for his future and the sake of his present and future clients. Ask the competition for a "not-to-exceed-price," too. If they have wide experience cleaning, they should know approximately what it takes to do a professional cleanup and how much it will cost them and you.

 

Blood and Biohazard Cleanup

Biohazards may be infected blood or tissue from crime scenes, suicides, and unattended deaths. Such infectious environments must be isolated until all cleaning, disinfecting, and removal is carried out. Extreme hygienic exaggeration should be used by the novice as well as the professional.  Always clean biohazardous environments as if cleaning for a toddler's use.

Never remove biohazardous material without wearing gloves. "For cleaning blood or bloody fluids from floors, bed, etc., you can use household rubber gloves." Wear protection over eyes, nose, and mouth. Have a safe means of exit and a place to decontaminate yourself and clothing.

Dried blood that flakes may easily become aerosolized if mishandled. Contact with airborne blood places the cleaner at risk of infectious disease. 

Before removing, moisten flaking (scabbing) blood. Cause it not to become airborne. Cover flaked blood with paper towels and lightly mosten with a disinfectant (bleach) from afar. Use a spray bottle while making wide, misting applications to the paper towels' surface. Before removing blood, ensure that it is moist enough not to flake, but not dripping.

Dry paper towels may be used to contain wet blood. Allow towels to dwell until dry. Flush in small quantities, or gently place inside two thick plastic bags. Seal tightly with duct tape. Directly dispose of in a landfill.

Dripping wet blood is considered biohazardous and universally considered infectious until proven otherwise. Contain blood from afar; disinfect it. Pour blood down the sanitary sewer if you are not going to seal it for transfer.

Thoroughly wash hands.

See Blood Cleanup 1, blood cleanup 2, and blood cleanup 3.

OSHA 1910.1030(d)(1)

General. Universal precautions shall be observed to prevent contact with blood or other potentially infectious materials. Under circumstances in which differentiation between body fluid types is difficult or impossible, all body fluids shall be considered potentially infectious materials. (return)

Useful disinfectants may be found here:

Blood Spills: see index at http://www.bccdc.org/downloads/pdf/epid/reports/CDManual_

Vinegar: http://www.apple-cider-vinegar-benefits.com/vinegar-as-a-disinfectant.html

Household bleach is a wonderful, but very corrosive disinfectant. It is a "midrange disinfectant." Bleach has a wide bacterial killing spectrum. It is inexpensive and found on most market shelves. However, bleach is extremely dangerous in the presence of acids, including urine. Open bleach bottles lose their strength; it loses strength when applied to organic material, like blood and decomposing matter. Bleach must be used cautiously, wisely. (return)

 

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