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Schools and childcare settings are particularly vulnerable to infections. So what can you do to minimise the spread of infectious illnesses at your childcare setting or school?
Kids spend a lot of time mixing closely with other children in places like childcare, pre-school nurseries, and schools. If one child catches a cold, norovirus, scarlet fever, salmonella, chicken pox, covid, flu or anything else, everyone else catches it in record time, along with the teachers and auxiliary staff like cooks, cleaners and caretakers.
Spread by direct contact between children via food, by touching infectious surfaces or breathing in infected air droplets, a wave of something as simple as a bad cold can send a school or nursery into a rough spin. In a world where time is money, illness in childcare settings can quickly have a dramatic impact on the business’s finances.
Very young children - infants and toddlers – are the most likely to use their hands to wipe their noses or rub their eyes before handling toys or touching other children, sending a virus from the nose or eyes of one child via hands or toys to the next child and so on. Because children get sick a lot in the first several years of life naturally, as their bodies build immunity to infections, the risk of a business-limiting illness is particularly high in childcare settings.
There isn’t always space to keep a poorly child separate from the others while their parents are on the way to pick them up. If several children get ill at once it can be very difficult to cope without it spreading faster and further. Even with sensible prevention measures, it’s likely some infections will spread anyway.
The current surge of whooping cough, with cases at a ten year high, is leading officials to advise people to stay away from work and children away from school if they’re infected. In Bulgaria a serious flu epidemic is closing schools, which are pivoting to online learning like they did during covid. Invasive Strep A infections are on the rise right now in some countries, mumps in others. And covid is making itself felt in Scotland, sending teachers off sick as well as pupils.
All this means it’s wise to do everything possible to protect your childcare business or school from infectious bacteria and viruses, years, moulds and spores. Luckily there’s an excellent way to do it without breaking the bank, with ongoing energy costs that are surprisingly low. It’s UV light disinfection, and it’s a business-saver.
UV light disinfection for schools
The best way to use UVC disinfection tech in schools is to use it in the rooms where the different school years mix. This has proved very effective in stopping illnesses and infections from spreading to every age group. Bringing UVC into play in shared spaces like gyms, IT rooms, language labs and canteens has an impressive impact.
Chris Roe RCN RGN is the Chief Medical Officer for a large prestigious boarding school called Willow Park in Dublin, where primary schools feed children into the senior school.
As he says,“Our top priority in opening the school in September 2020 was the safety of our students and staff. My office was identified as one of our main priorities due to the volume of students and staff that would come through daily. After installation of our fixed UV fitting, I easily felt more comfortable being able to blast the room multiple times during the day between patients. We did also introduce portable UV systems to clean the classrooms in the school and it has been a great addition to our sanitising process. Although I do not have the exact numbers,
I do believe that not only did the purifier help with no outbreaks of COVID 19, but there was also a reduced number of stomach bugs and colds and flus in general. The team has always supported us with any technical issues and had a rapid customer response”.
Feel free to
get in touch. We’ll be pleased to discuss how to keep the pupils at your school safe from pathogens.