UK: +44 1379 658 721
Ireland: +353 89 221 3723
USA: +1 754 252 3536
Middle East - N. Africa: + 971 52 873 4738
Australia: +61 3 9310 5259
We’re delighted to announce that NHS England has invited Cool-Tech UVC to its first ever prestigious two-day ‘invitation only’ event in April 2021, designed to bring the nation’s best-respected infection prevention and control professionals together. It’s called
Infection Prevention and Control 2021.
This is what you need to know about the conference itself, the part our technology will be playing in the future of UK healthcare systems, and why our UV disinfection technology deserves showcasing at an event like this.
About Infection prevention and Control - Learning from Covid19 & AMR
The first Infection Prevention and Control Annual Conference will take place over two days in April 2021. National Health Service England and Ireland will be announcing new guidelines for Infection Prevention and Control at the event. It’ll cover best practice for acute nursing plus community, mental health, Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR), and more.
During 2020 NHS England and Ireland rolled out their vision for a Long Term Plan for Infection Prevention and Control, focusing hard on AMR and Gram-Negative bloodstream infections. At the same time we suffered the most serious global pandemic in recent history. This event will review the lessons learned so far and delve deep into the personal hygiene protocols that are often, these days, a matter of life or death.
Outbreak management, improving hand hygiene and related auditing procedures, plus innovative proven decontamination and cleaning protocols will be high on the list, which is where we come in. Infection prevention will be reviews closely, along with current control standards, and best practice will be celebrated. The exhibition side of the conference will showcase the latest global innovations and technologies, giving delegates the chance to network with more than 500 healthcare professionals on each of the two days.
What’s on the cards
The 2021 Infection Prevention Control Conference takes place at the National Conference Centre in Birmingham, UK, 20th-21st April, 8am to 4.50pm. Will we see you there to experience all this and more?
Who will be attending?
The delegate list is long and varied, covering people working in infection prevention and control itself plus microbiologists, surveillance nurses and surgeons, facilities directors and estate managers, pharmacists, risk managers and governance managers. In
short, anyone and everyone who has a vested interest in preventing and controlling infections.
Click here to see our page on the event website.
Our UV-emitting LED lights kill coronavirus ‘efficiently, cheaply and quickly’
There’s a constant stream of new science proving UVC technology works to kill Covid, including a new study
reported by MSN in mid December 2020. It talks about ‘a global first’ in the fight against Covid-19, with UV LED lights tipped as killing the coronavirus ‘efficiently, quickly, and cheaply’ using ultraviolet light-emitting diodes.
This latest news about UV LED virus killing success comes from Professor Hadas Mamane, Head of the Environmental Engineering Program at the Tel Aviv University School of Mechanical Engineering. She says the study, which is the first to investigate the disinfection efficiency of UV-LED irradiation at different wavelengths on a virus from the coronavirus family, reveals how disinfection systems based on LED bulbs could be fitted into ventilation systems and air conditioners to sterilise the air being exchanged. In her words:
“We discovered that it is quite simple to kill the coronavirus using LED bulbs that radiate ultraviolet light. We killed the viruses using cheaper and more readily available LED bulbs, which consume little energy and do not contain mercury like regular bulbs. Our research has commercial and societal implications, given the possibility of using such LED bulbs in all areas of our lives, safely and quickly.”
The team’s ideal wavelength turned out to be 285 nm, at which it took ‘less than half a minute to destroy more than 99.9 per cent of the coronaviruses’. It’s great news because 285 nm LED bulbs are cheaper and more readily available than other wavelengths – and our machines operate at a very similar wavelength.
LEDs magazine appeals for policymakers to seize the LED opportunity
In a heartfelt appeal,
LEDs magazine adds its voice to fast-growing calls for policymakers to secure public health through LED light disinfection. In their words:
“UV-C disinfection should be clearly listed among the technologies included in a renovation project, as part of the design of new safe spaces and to minimize the transmission of infectious diseases such as COVID-19 today and the common cold tomorrow.”
“The benefits are clear: UV germicidal irradiation (UVGI) is an established disinfection technology that has been applied extensively since 1910 and it has been proven to inactivate the SARS-CoV-2 virus.”
UVC light is already widely used to disinfect drinking water, swimming pools, fish ponds, air and surfaces in manufacturing and healthcare settings. The Global Lighting Association has published and widely shared their UV-C Safety Guidelines, including current worldwide standards and legislation. And LightingEurope has created a dedicated subgroup on UV-C as well as drafting comprehensive UVC FAQ to complement the GLA’s work.
These trusted organisations are all busy sharing their publications and expertise with market surveillance and public health authorities across Europe, to help them shape policy guidelines for using proven, safe UV-C disinfection technologies into the future.
Chosen by NHSE/I for our UVC disinfection expertise
It feels great to be chosen by the NHS to play a vital part in this essential conference and exhibition.
Thank you, NHS. We’re looking forward to showcasing our Covid-killing technology and answering people’s questions at the event. In the meantime stay safe and stay well.