This blood cleanup website provides blood cleanup information and help for biohazard cleanup, death cleanup, decomposition cleanup, and suicide cleanup.

Feel free to call for blood cleanup information or to set an appointment for blood cleanup, commercial, industrial, or residential.

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Always wash hands and use protective equipment. Use tools like those found on our suggesed tools page.

 

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Blood Cleanup Information

When you call expect to speak with a real person. We do not use an answering machine or an answering service.

Expect answers to questions about blood cleanup following a death involving homicide, suicide, unattended death, or other blood loss events. Our prices reflect a solo cleaner's prices because we have always used one cleaner, which works well for us and our clients.

A single cleaner has an opportunity to work flexibly by additing time to a job, by adding a bit of extra detail, and by making life easier for all concerned. This approach lead to cleaning after hundreds of death scenes.

Can you imagine the experience gained by cleaning after hundreds of death scenes alone. That a lot of blood to cleanup. We feel that our service, experience, and blood cleanup experience benefit all parties involved. Call now for more information to to make an appointment, if you wish.

Cleaning Death Scene Blood for the complete Novice

In my business experience I learned long ago that not everyone can afford a professional biohazard cleaner. So for them and other cleaners I present the following as words to consider before cleaning up death scene blood.

Take your time. Get used to this new environment by observing it from a distance. Move around the room while staying off any blood that may have contaminated the floor. Get different perspectives because your next steps include creating a plan on paper. Leave room between your steps because you will add and delete as you think about what to do.

For sure you don’t want to repeat steps.

Work confidently. You’ve cleaned many times before and you survived. The difference here creates some apprehension because it looks so different from anything else that you’ve cleaned. The odor has nothing to do with disease. It might spoil your lunch, but it cannot make you sick.

Without any doubt we understand that blood’s contents include feces, urine, enzymes, fats, oils, and all sorts of micro-organisms. Some blood even contains viruses known as HIV, Hepatitis B and C, and more. Blood’s bacteria count once death occurs grows exponentially as decomposition follows. Blood’s filth begins off-gassing methan, sulfur, and derivatives of these gases. Others soon join the stink.

So long as the cleaner remains at a distance from blood they have no risk of contamination, with an exception. Airborne dried, flaky blood happens to create infectious conditions for the cleaner. No fans or air handlers should run during cleaning.

Wear thick gloves when working near blood. Wear goggles. Wear a respirator, and if not a respirator, at least wear a paper mask or cloth over the nose and mouth. If you have coveralls, wear them too. If you can buy a protective suit at a hardware store, so much the better.

Cleaners have no need to fear bloodborne pathogens if they plan ahead, detail by detail. Know where you want to go. If you plan well your job requires handling objectionable materials once and only once. So plan and think before acting. Remain focused, remain patient, and keep your plan’s details in mind. Eventually your plan comes up short, but you will know how to compensate because you focused on your steps to completion. You know how to get there.

Creating Distance

Create distance from blood and other biohazardous materials to reduce risks. Work patiently. Your plan, your focus, and attention to detail pays dividends in risk reduction as your plan unfolds, slowly and deliberately.

“Create distance between yourself and the blood,” I said. This sounds so obvious. I’ll bet that you didn’t think of this one. If you have a blood stained mattress and it’s horrific and has a terrible odor, try something like this.

Sealer

Buy at least two cans of Zennesser oil based spray paint from the Home Depot or Lowes. When you walk into the death scene room (staying off any blood on the floor) walk to the mattress and blast it. Using one can of spray in each hand you’ll quickly cover the offending material.

Your mask will help reduce the spray’s odor. If you have a couch, lounge chair, or other bulky object heavily soiled by blood, do the same to it. Let it and the blood dry thoroughly. This begins your distance building between you and the blood.

Once dried, your next step closely resembles wrapping a gift for Christmas or birthdays. You will want to place a cover over the blood stained object by placing a clean sheet or tarp over the object. Wrap it tightly. Using duct tape, tape your covering tightly.

Rope

A long rope should conclude your wrapping. If you like, tie the object before using duct tape. Add tape and rope as you please. The better wrapped, the easier to move your offending object. Save some rope to create handles for pulling and dragging the object. Of course a dolly may help.

Violent death scenes and decomposition will leave blood on floors. Following these steps or the steps located on these web sites will help inform your steps.

Mop

If you must use a mop, use a good mop and bucket with cool water and plenty of bleach. The Center for Disease Control recommends a blend of one to ten percent bleach to water for disinfecting nonporous surfaces. This solution works for areas cleared of the source material, blood and other infectious materials.

Paper Towels

When cleaning blood from a nonporous floor the cleaner might want to use paper towels or cloth towels. This approach costs some money, but it works well while helping the cleaner create distance from the blood. Paper towels as well as cloth towels react well to bleach solutions. Full saturation with a bleach solution becomes inevitable given enough solution and time.

Bleach and time should render bloodborne pathogens inert, if these germs exist exist at all in your contaminated area or towels. If the blood remains moist and time does got favor letting the blood dry out, another approach allows for adding bleach and water with a mop. Let it dwell.

To mop up this mess your mop bucket cannot contain solution. Keep it empty. Slowly mop in figure-eights. If the mop head weighs too much to move, or if you don't have room for figure-eights, fine. Do what you can. Your actions here move your solution, which helps decontaminate the blood.

Slowly lift your mop to the bucket’s wringer, squeeze out the offending solution very gently, and continue mopping until the majority of blood resides in the bucket. Pour the bloody solution into a toilet and flush.

By this time your mop head’s contamination requires extensive decontamination if not safe disposal. If you have a working toilet, slowly, gently rinse your mop head and flush often. A detergent added to the toilet bowl creates a good solution for breaking down the blood on the mop. Let it dwell. Use the same process if you prefer the mop bucket to the toilet. Your solution goes down the toilet any way.

Pour bleach into the toilet and let the mop head dwell for a reasonable time. At some point the mop head becomes rinsed and bleached enough to dry somewhere safe and out of sight.

BEWARE: If your toilet connects to a cesspool, you may need to verify your solution will not damage it.

Paper towels work well on a damp floor. One way to approach this task sacrifices clean bath towels, but these will recover in a hot water machine wash with bleach and soap.

Place large towels in a strong solution of bleach and water. Wring most of this solution from the towel. Place the towel open and flat on the floor about six inches from the soiled area.

Place a large push broom in the center of the towel. Now press downward on the broom while pushing toward the opposite side of te soiled area. The broom’s plastic bristles should hold the towel in place. Decontaminating this towel in a clean, disinfected toilet will work quickly if you choose to repeat this technique.

Eventually your comfort level for the contaminated area will allow you to proceed as if cleaning any other floor.

As above, the same or similar technique works on other contaminated surfaces. If cleaning wood furniture it will help if you can somehow place it outdoors in the Sun. Nothing disinfects as well as the Sun.

When cleaning blood from a nice wood floor or other valuable wood surface. Murphy’s seems to allow for greater dwell time with less risk of damage to the wood. For the sake of caution, you may want to test the Murphy’s with water on unstained wood furnishings floor. Error on the side of caution.

A bleach, water, and soap solution for scrubbing blood on plywood floors works when done conservatively. Never pour water onto a plywood floor or Mobile Home’s floor. Spray it with a mist until full saturation of the blood occurs. Then scrubbing and removing the blood will follow steps like those mentioned above.

Whenever cleaning a blood stained floor does not remove blood stains, consider sealing the stained area once completing thorough cleaning. No problems from odor should occur if the floor scrubbing and thorough rinsing preceded a thorough decontamination. If a novice, you can disinfect with bleach and water. Beware, let the wood thoroughly dry out and then sand it smooth. Apply Zennesser or Kilz water based or oil based sealers to the once soiled area. Any remaining odor issues should no longer exist.

Anytime that restoration of a floor follows a death scene cleanup, let the floor remain uncovered by carpet or other floor coverings. You will want to ensure no odors recur.

More blood cleanup information at Orange-County-Crime-Scene-Cleanup.com

 

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Once upon a time people believed that illness and disease arose from spirits, the stars, and other metaphysical causes.
 
Thanks to science and the microscope our grasp of the causes of illness and disease serves us well.
 
As a result we usually call bloodborne pathogens "germs." Germs now explain the passing of illness and disease from the air we breath, the germs on our hands, and the fluids in our bodies.
 
Not all germs exist in blood or the air around us.
 
We learn through microscopes about a world existing beyond our perception, the world of microscopic life.
 
Through a microscope focused on pond water we see bigger organisms eating and ingesting smaller organisms.
 
Squiggly little single-cell critters cross our vision to our amazement. This world beyond perception hosts germs causing diarrhea in millions of people.
 
Other illnesses arise from germs found in our blood. Our interest in germs focuses on those germs carried in human blood.
 
Once in our blood germs fight the anti-bodies created by our bodies to fight off these germs, the bloodborne pathogens.
 
If we become weak and ill we lose our ability to fight these germs. Without antibodies for some germs we become sicker and die. Bloodborne pathogens represent the more deadly germs for human beings. HIV and Hepatitis C strike fear into absent minded lovers or needle-stick victims because we have no natural anti-bodies for these disease. In fact, we probably will never have cures for these diseases.
 
So when it comes to cleaning up blood following a biohazardous event like a death, including homicides, suicides, and unattended deaths, we must use care and proven techniques.

 
 

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