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How to create safe laundries to ensure optimal disinfection and washing processes

Written by Girbau | Nov 30, 2020 11:00:00 PM

When we talk about washing or disinfecting garments or fabrics, most of us think only about the washing process itself. However, there are a range of factors and circumstances that must be considered for a washing and disinfecting process to be completed successfully. In laundries in hotels, aged care homes and hospitals, this aspect is vital as they are responsible for ensuring that all the linen is properly handled, so guaranteeing proper sterilisation to help create a safe environment.

This is why at Girbau we argue for the importance of good practice in laundries to create a safe environment, above all because the Covid-19 pandemic requires this, for guests, users or patients, and to do this we offer all our know-how to the sector to help them meet today's challenges.

Design is the first essential point to bear in mind

In designing laundries of this kind, where very high volumes of linen are processed, it must always be taken into account that they must be able to cope with these volumes efficiently. It is therefore vital to establish a hygienic flow of linen, but how is this done? To begin with, the work area must be laid out in three main areas: the dirty linen sorting area, the washing area and the clean area, which includes drying, ironing and folding, and have two completely separate doors, one for dirty linen to come in and another for clean linen to go out. These areas must be clearly separated and dirty linen must be sorted in an enclosed space with direct access to the washing area.

Picking up and transporting linen, one of the most delicate points

This process is often not given the importance it deserves, and this is a serious mistake because handling both dirty and clean linen together means there is a risk that clean items can be re-contaminated. Thus, apart from taking basic hygiene measures, special attention must be paid to other factors, such as collecting all the linen from the room before starting to clean it, separating linen depending on the degree or type of dirtiness and using water-soluble bags for linen suspected of being contaminated.