Our
Services
Biohazard Abatement Service
Remove all biohazards with proper cleaning,
disinfection, deodorization and document disposal of infectious
materials.
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Crime Scene |
Industrial Accident |
Jail Cells & Cruisers |
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Trauma Scene |
Auto Accident |
Gross Filth |
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Suicides |
Meth Labs |
Pet Odors |
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Homicides |
Tear Gas |
Human Feces |
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Decompositions |
Pepper Spray |
Animal Droppings |
Our bio recovery and decontamination technicians
have received special training in crime and trauma scene cleanup for homicide,
suicide, auto / industrial accident, decomposition / unattended death, meth lab
cleanup, MERSA / MRSA, staph infection cleaning, bacterial decontamination, odor
neutralizing and hazardous waste removal.
Points To Ponder:
Many of us have been in
situations that really scared us, but did you know that
blood-borne pathogens, as well as body fluids, carry viruses,
can make you DEATHLY ILL and could KILL you? Now, if that’s not
a scary enough thought, here are some more interesting
statistics
Did You Know:
That AIDS/HIV can be transmitted through ways other than
sexual contact? That AIDS/HIV can be transmitted by sharing
needles, and through open cuts in the skin?
The CDC also states that HIV is unable to reproduce outside its
living host (UNLIKE BACTERIA OR FUNGI, WHICH MAY REPRODUCE UNDER
OTHER CONDITIONS).
The reason for bringing this is up is
to encourage you to always try to be safe. Although HIV has been
transmitted between family members in a household setting, this
type of transmission is rare. You should, however, always take
safety precautions to ensure your safety. Some safety guidelines
are as follows:
Gloves should be worn during contact with blood or other body
fluids.
Cuts, sores, or breaks in the skin in both the caregiver and the
patient should always be bandaged.
Hands and other parts of the body should be washed immediately
after contact with blood or other body fluids.
SURFACES soiled with blood or other body fluids should be
DISINFECTED appropriately.
Dispose of any needles and other sharp instruments in a PUNCTURE
PROOF container.
Some HEPATITIS VIRUSES can be as deadly
as the AIDS/HIV virus. Let’s take HAV (Hepatitis-A) for example.
Even though it is primarily a food virus, it can lead to other
illnesses. HAV accounts for approximately 20,000 to 35,000 cases
of food-borne illness each year in the United States.
Here are some facts about HBV (Hepatitis-B):
Worldwide, 1 out of 3 people have been infected with the
Hepatitis-B virus.
HBV is one of the most common and serious diseases in the world!
According to the Hepatitis B Foundation, there are approximately
400 million chronic carriers of HBV worldwide. Over 75% of these
carriers reside in the Asia-Pacific region.
One million people die each year from
acute and chronic liver disease caused by HBV infection, making
it the ninth leading cause of death worldwide.
Nearly 300,000 people become infected each year with HBV. Of
that number, one out of ten becomes a chronic carrier. HBV is
100 times more infectious than the AIDS virus. In the United
States approximately 2 healthcare workers are infected each day
with HBV. There is a vaccine for HBV, but for the 400 million
who are already carriers of HBV the
vaccine is of no use.
HBV can be transmitted through any
infected person’s mucus membranes upon contact with infected
body fluids such as semen, vaginal secretions, saliva, and
blood. The highest concentration of the virus, however, is found
in the blood.
Because of the availability of a
vaccine, HBV is one of the most preventable STDs (Sexually
Transmitted Disease). Most people don’t think of HBV as an STD.
And then there is HCV (Hepatitis C virus) which is a viral
infection of the liver.
HCV is transmitted by exposure to blood from an infected
individual.
The greatest risk of transmitting HCV from person to person is
during a period of one or more weeks before onset of symptoms.
However, since the majority of people infected with HCV do not
have symptoms, the period of communicability is indeterminate.
Humans remain contagious as long as they carry the virus.
What about co-infection
between HIV and HCV?
About one-quarter of HIV-infected persons in the United States
are also infected with HCV.
HCV is transmitted primarily by passages through the skin (cuts,
sores, any kind of break in the skin), as well as by exposure
to contaminated blood.
Another deadly disease is TB
(Tuberculosis). TB is a disease that is spread from person to
person through the air.
An estimated 10 to 15 million Americans are infected with the TB
bacteria, with the potential to develop active TB disease in the
future.
Approximately 2 billion people (one third of the world
population) are infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the
cause of TB.
TB can also cause liver damage.
We have performed extensive research
into diseases that can be spread when an area has not been
properly decontaminated. We believe that we can make a major
difference by helping to stop the spread of such diseases
Shreveport, Louisiana, is the third-largest city and the third
largest
metropolitan area in the
U.S. state of
Louisiana and the 99th-largest city in the
United States.
[1]
[2]
[3]
It is the seat of
Caddo Parish.
Bossier City lies across the
Red River in
Bossier Parish and the
Shreveport-Bossier City Metropolitan Area population exceeds
375,000. [4]
Shreveport is the commercial and cultural center of the
Ark-La-Tex, the area where
Arkansas,
Louisiana, and
Texas
meet. Some call it the "Gateway to
East Texas;" others have observed that Shreveport sits on the border
between the
South and the
West. The city exercises a great pull over this region. Many people
in the community refer to the two cities of Shreveport and Bossier City,
which are separated only by the Red River, as "Shreveport-Bossier
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