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  1. #1
    Professional Detailer rollman's Avatar
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    Question Cleaning up Blood

    I found this article on the PDTA site . :


    CLEANING UP BLOOD

    December 30, 2002 -When a vehicle arrives at a collision repair facility or when a
    towing service picks up a vehicle with bloodstains, it raises serious concerns.
    These concerns are with diseases that can be carried in blood, called blood
    borne pathogens (BBP). These include HIV or Hepatitis B viruses. HIV can live
    up to 30 minutes, or longer if the blood is pooled. Hepatitis B can live up to
    two weeks in a bloodstain according to the Centers for Disease Control and
    Prevention.
    The U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) is well aware of
    the risks involved in handling blood. There is a separate OSHA standard for BBPs
    (29 CFR 1910.1030) that establishes specific requirements for labeling,
    containment, and disposal of waste material contaminated with blood.

    The BBP standard states that no employee can be placed in a position to be
    exposed to blood spills without first:

    receiving BBP training.
    having a written BBP exposure control plan. The plan is written by the
    employer and must be reviewed and updated annually.
    having been provided personal protective equipment.
    having been offered the Hepatitis B vaccine, and exposure evaluation and
    follow-up.
    being provided with a method to remove and properly store the bio-hazardous
    waste in properly marked containers for disposal at an approved site.
    OSHA has the potential to fine facilities for failure to have policies in place. Fines
    can range up to $70,000 for willful offenses.

    The Problem With Blood

    The problem with blood is that it is hardly ever safe to handle. Like any waste,
    fresh, wet blood carries the highest risk of infection. But dry blood can flake
    and be inhaled, or can become liquid again when contacting moisture, such as
    moisture from your eyes, nose, or mouth. Because dry blood can go airborne,
    cleaning a vehicle with bloodstains requires removal of the air ducts and cleaning
    them separately. Airborne particles also requires the wearing of respirators and
    eye protection when cleaning up blood.

    The air ducts, an instrument panel, or anything hard that isn’t absorbent can be
    considered disinfected after it is properly cleaned, but cloth seats can never be
    considered 100% disinfected. There are processes that can be used to clean
    them, but because the nap of the material holds parts of the spill, you can
    never guarantee total disinfection.

    Rubber gloves are no longer the magical protective clothing item that protect
    against all diseases. Every situation needs to be handled as if the most
    dangerous disease was contained in the stain and doing this will help limit the
    danger facing the person cleaning.

    Biohazard Cleaning Organizations

    One way for a facility to handle blood stains is to sublet the cleanup on an as-
    needed basis. There are organizations that specialize in the cleanup of
    biohazardous waste at crime scenes, disaster sites, and (vehicle) accident
    scenes. Service is guaranteed usually within 24 hours. One organization has
    facilities located in Canada and 47 of the 50 states (www.americanbiorecovery.
    org).

    As a service, these same organizations will provide the required BBP training.
    This can be done at a company’s workplace for technicians who are at high risk
    of exposure. Only after the appropriate training has been provided can an
    employer require that someone clean blood stains, contain and store the
    infected articles, and through the proper services, dispose of contaminated
    items.

    Conclusion

    Bloodstains and other bodily fluids are risky business. ONLY properly trained
    persons should handle or perform blood spill cleaning tasks.



    This article first appeared in the I-CAR Advantage Online,
    which is published and distributed free of charge. I-CAR, the
    Inter-Industry Conference on Auto Collision Repair, is a
    not-for-profit international training organization that
    researches and develops quality technical education programs
    related to collision repair. To learn more about I-CAR, and to
    subscribe to the free publication, visit http://www.i-car.com.


    Cleaning up Blood
    Good things are not cheap, and cheap things are seldom good !

  2. #2
    Labster's Avatar
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    When I was working at a detailing shop we`d get in crime scene cars from time to time. I almost lost my stomach a few times. It definately isn`t a service that I`m advertising for my business. The owner usually got his wife who was a nurse to do most of it because he had such a weak stomach.

  3. #3

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    OXI CLEAN it. it does wonders on organic stuff. :beer

  4. #4
    GraniteState's Avatar
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    There is acually a big article written this month in Professional Carwashing & detailing magazine. it`s written by Bud Abrams.. According to the article you need to be certified in it and have proper respirators, gloves, etc read it at carwash.com
    DISTINGUISHED DETAILING

    Work and hope, but don`t hope more than you work!

  5. #5
    Proud Resident Of Detail City
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    Latex gloves should be sufficient to protect detailers. Most of the time the blood is dry anyways, and the pathogens are dead. Blood is a protein based stain, and needs either and enzyme cleaner or oxygen activated power.

  6. #6
    edschwab1's Avatar
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    Interesting article. A memeber on detail city posted about a biohazard clean-up recently.

    Who does training for this type of work?

    Eric
    Last edited by edschwab1; 09-12-2004 at 12:08 AM.
    Have you AIO`d today?
    Done, or Done right? You decide.
    Score early, Score often.
    You can not win from the penalty box.
    You can not score from the penalty box.

  7. #7
    Professional Detailer rollman's Avatar
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    Originally posted by brwill2004
    Latex gloves should be sufficient to protect detailers. Most of the time the blood is dry anyways, and the pathogens are dead. Blood is a protein based stain, and needs either and enzyme cleaner or oxygen activated power.
    I think you should reread that article. Rubber gloves can`t stop something you breath in .


    Yeah edschwab1 I thought the article was real interesting. I did a car that the front hood and fenders were spotted with blood ,all from a bar fight that spilled over to the parking lot.
    Good things are not cheap, and cheap things are seldom good !

  8. #8
    Proud Resident Of Detail City
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    I work in a hospital, and I do not think dry blood can be aresolized.

  9. #9
    GraniteState's Avatar
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    It said the same thing in the article in carwashing and detaing magazine.. It can flake up and be breathed in.
    DISTINGUISHED DETAILING

    Work and hope, but don`t hope more than you work!

  10. #10

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    flaking up due to using a scrub brush to work the carpet cleaner possibly. That would be the only concern of mine for breathing in dried blood.

 

 

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