The Invisible
Enemies
Most people spend around 90% of their time indoors, at home or in the office.
The EPA – Environmental Protection Agency claims the quality of air indoors can be 100 times worse than outdoors.
Some factors contribute to indoor contamination:
- High concentration of people in rooms increase fungus, bacteria and vi- rus development, and cross contamination
-New building insulation techniques reduce outside air interchanges and consequently air conditioning running cost, but in turn drastically increase mould, and bacteria colonies
-Deficient air conditioning duct cleaning
-Concentration of organic material such as books, carpeting, curtains, and sofas.
Good air quality indoors is a must for those affected by respiratory diseases and allergies.
Contaminated indoor air (fungus, airborne allergens, pollens, ozone) can trigger
-Asthma, bronchitis, rhinitis, and sinusitis
-Fungal infections in immune depressed patients
-Eye, throat and nose irritation
-Headaches, lethargy, irritability
-Cough and difficulty in concentration
Relation between microorganisms and related diseases.
Inocolums(*) X Virulency (**) human Resistance
(*) Quantity of microorganisms (**) Microorganism aggressiveness
The higher “Inocolums” and “Virulency” and or the lower “Human resistance” results in greater contamination risk to people. The main contamination causes are several types of fungus, (some of them already resistant to the most power- ful chemicals and poisons), bacteria, viruses, the fi ne dust mite excrements and skeletons containing powerful allergens and hazardous fungus, and the seasonal pollens.
Airfree can safely and silently destroy those allergens
3