Before move-in cleaning checklist

The right to clean air is a human right

According to research, there are 3 ways to prevent the spread of any communicable contagion - washing of hands, disinfecting surfaces, and purifying the air, but so unfortunate, only one of these has been fully engaged by many. Majority sanitizes their hand, but only insignificant numbers care to disinfect the most daily touchable objects and places around them, and larger percentage aren’t aware of the need to disinfecting the air they breathe in on daily basis.

According to the World Health Organization, every year around 7 million premature deaths are attributable to air pollution—a staggering 800 people every hour or 13 every minute. Overall, air pollution is responsible for more deaths than many other risk factors, including malnutrition, alcohol use and physical inactivity.

Studies have shown that infections are widely spread through the droplets into the thin air, either by cough or sneeze. Respiratory viruses spread by direct person-to-person contact, the airborne route and via contaminated surfaces. For example, when a person sneezes there is some risk of infection via the airborne route as the infectious particles in that sneeze cover few meters away from the source. During the COVID-19 pandemic, it’s also worth noting that viruses can linger in an environment through coughing, sneezing or even breathing.

The invisible actually hurts more than the visible, and air pollution is a major invisible risk to your health. By breathing cleaner air, the World Health Organization states that you can reduce the risk of stroke, heart disease, lung cancer and respiratory diseases such as asthma.

The most common indoor air pollutants are combustion products, biological particles from mold, pet dander, pollen, volatile organic compounds (VOCs), lead dust and asbestos. Indoor air may also contain over 900 different types of gaseous chemicals; thus, breathing in tiny, unseen pollutants puts you at risk. These pass through your lung tissue and into your bloodstream, circulating through your body and staying there. Without air there can be no life but breathing polluted air condemns us to a life of disease and early death.

According to the World Health Organization, every year around 7 million premature deaths are attributable to air pollution—a staggering 800 people every hour or 13 every minute. Overall, air pollution is responsible for more deaths than many other risk factors, including malnutrition, alcohol use and physical inactivity.

Air pollution is all around us. Indoors, outdoors, in cities and in the countryside. It affects us all, whether we realize it or not. For the longest time, we have taken the air we breathe for granted. On the street and inside the house, the sources of air pollution can be very different, yet their effects are equally deadly: asthma, other respiratory illnesses and heart disease are among the adverse health effects known to be caused by polluted air.


Your Child may be at risk
Globally, 93 per cent of all children breathe air that contains higher concentrations of pollutants than the World Health Organization (WHO) considers safe to human health. As a result, 600,000 children die prematurely each year because of air pollution. As if that were not enough, exposure to dirty air also harms brain development, leading to cognitive and motor impairments, while at the same time putting children at greater risk for chronic disease later in life.

Household air pollution is particularly harmful to women and children due to their traditional home-based roles in many cultures. About 60 per cent of household air pollution-related deaths globally are among women and children, and more than half of all pneumonia deaths in children under five can be attributed to indoor air pollution.

The right to clean air is a human right Take action NOW! Remember, clean air is your right!

Disinfectants are often assumed to be limited to use on surfaces only, but that is not the case. The air around us is necessary for our survival, but our inhaling and exhaling is so automatic that we hardly ever think about our breathing or the kind of air we are taking into our bodies. Yet we cannot afford to take the quality of the air we breathe for granted. Many times, indoor air contains tiny microbe sized items that can have numerous and diverse effects on our health once inhaled into the body. These range from allergy related problems or flu among other serious health conditions. With modern technological developments, however, it’s been possible to use an air purifier to clean out the air we breathe when indoors.

Even though no single global standard for clean air exists, there are many different definitions of clean air. The air quality outdoors varies depending on emissions or contaminants around. Indoors, the air can be two to five times more polluted than the air outside according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Studies show that breathing clean air can contribute to your health and well-being. Using GREENAID products and solution can go a long way toward helping you breathe healthier. GREENAID solution helps to decontaminate through the process of vaporization without alteration in temperature, and thereby greatly reduces the health effects associated with breathing bad indoor and outdoor air.

What is GREENAID solution made of?
GREENAID solution is called P-H2O, a water-based solution; thus, non-toxic, non-hazardous, non-flammable, and Chemical FREE. It is made of a simple chemistry that ends up as Hypochlorous acid (HOCl). This is the same substance your immune system uses to fight infection. Its acidity is like that of a mild citrus juice—and yet it is 100 times more effective against bacteria, fungus and viruses than bleach-based disinfectants. P-H2O is made by passing an electric current through salt solution. While this solution kills microorganisms on contact, it is completely safe for humans.

AT GREENAID

Our target is to let our solution (P-H2O) be in every home and within the reach of every individual as their preferred 1st aid measure against communicable contagions; most importantly, to be the cheapest and safest alternatives to the traditional counterparts in market.