Bind It

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Bind It

consumables nuclear-medicine quality-control

PRODUCT DESCRIPTION

Bind-It™ Ready-to-Use Spray has a high volume spray that aids in lifting the contaminants from any surface. While the radioactive contamination will bind in solution to be wiped or rinsed away. Bind-It™ Ready-to-Use Spray will not corrode metal, plastic or any other surface in your unit. Bind-It™ is safe to use on clothing and linens too.

Project Details

Bind-It™ Ready-to-Use Spray has a high volume spray that aids in lifting the contaminants from any surface. While the radioactive contamination will bind in solution to be wiped or rinsed away. Bind-It™ Ready-to-Use Spray will not corrode metal, plastic or any other surface in your unit. Bind-It™ is safe to use on clothing and linens too.

Most hand soaps either clean well, or make your hands feel good. Bind-It™ Hand & Body Soap not only does both, but also removes radioactive contamination. No other hand & body soap can do that!

Bind-It™ Hand Soap kills viruses and bacteria. When you scrub with Bind-It, it removes the bonding layer of viruses and splits open the outer membrane of the virus or bacteria, killing it. Bind-It then encapsulates the contaminants holding them in solution. When you rinse your hands, you are washing away all the dead germs. Bind-It™ Hand & Body Soap will ensure you don’t take your work home with you.

More than 20 Million Nuclear Medicine procedures are performed in the US every year and YOUR EMS units are transporting these patients.

Patients transported in EMS vehicles, WILL be leaving radioactive contamination behind.

Any surface they come into contact with may be contaminated and must be cleaned properly.

A sneeze, a cough, a runny nose, saliva, sweat, urine, stool, vomit…WILL spread radioactive contamination unless it is removed properly.

Exposure to contamination can cause others, non patients, to “uptake” the radiotracer.

Patients that undergo treatments will be passing radioactive contamination out of their bodies for hours or even days.

According to an article in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, exposure to small amounts of radiotracers like I131 may be more dangerous than large amounts, mutating cells causing cancer.

 

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