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What is the Difference Between Sanitizing and Disinfecting?
In the cleaning industry, there are many misunderstandings about disinfectants and sanitizers. The terms are interchanged quite frequently in discussions, as many people believe they have the same meaning. And although similar, there are differences between sanitizing and disinfecting. A disinfectant is a chemical that completely destroys all organisms listed on its label. The organisms it kills are disease causing bacteria and pathogens, and it may or may not kill viruses and fungi. From a legal standpoint (EPA guidelines), disinfectants must reduce the level of pathogenic bacteria by 99.999% during a time frame of greater than 5 minutes but less than 10 minutes. A sanitizer is a chemical that reduces the number of microorganisms to a safe level. It doesn't need to eliminate 100% of all organisms to be effective. Sanitizers do not kill viruses and fungi, and in a food service situation the sanitizer must reduce the bacteria count by 99.999%. Sanitizers are required to kill 99.999% of the infectious organisms present within 30 seconds. If you clean food service areas, then you'll be interested in sanitizers. If you clean medical facilities you'll be more interested in disinfectants. If you provide green cleaning services, you may want to consider which one will have the least harmful enviromnental impact. If you just need to remove soil, you should consider using an all-purpose cleaner rather than a disinfectant or sanitizer. Would you like to reprint this article in your newsletter, on your web site, or on your blog? You sure can! As long as the article is complete and unaltered (including the author information below). Send a copy of the reprint to us by filling out the contact form, including the URL of the published article. (Make sure all links are live if placed in an e-zine, on a web site or blog.) You must include the following information at the end of each article you reprint: Copyright TheJanitorialStore.com. All Rights Reserved. |