0
Basket
Contact
The clean solution
Icon respiratory protection

Zug fire service brings dynamism to mask cleaning

Machine cleaning respiratory protective equipment with the TopClean M

Feuerwehr Zug aus der Schweiz

When you see the door to the respiratory protective equipment workshop at Zug voluntary fire service in Switzerland, one thing is immediately clear: they take their equipment hygiene seriously here. A sign shows how you have to dress to enter the room: wear no assignment PPE or boots. You get changed or you don't come in.

It is a Swiss peculiarity that brings wearers of respiratory protective equipment into the respiratory protective equipment workshop: here, it is standard for every firefighter to clean and inspect his or her own mask – at least after training. In 2018, mask manufacturers publicised the directive requiring regulators to be disinfected, too, meaning there is a need for many Swiss respiratory protective equipment workshops to change how they do things.

 

Only respiratory protective equipment technicians are to be involved in mask cleaning.

‘We have got quite an innovative Brigade Commander who really cares about the safety of his people,’

Samuel Schmid tells us. He is head of the logistics department at Zug voluntary fire service and he is one of five respiratory protective equipment technicians employed by the service. That means he is one of the people cleaning his colleagues' BA masks using Zug's TopClean M cleaning and disinfection machine for respiratory protective equipment by MEIKO. ‘We've got an assured process, reliable results and we don't have to do it all by hand anymore,’ he says, recounting the benefits of the TopClean M cleaning and disinfection machine for respiratory protective equipment. Zug voluntary fire service has 65 masks in circulation. It was a mask manufacturer who told the respiratory protective equipment technicians that these masks could be cleaned much faster, more conveniently and more reliably in a machine, thanks to MEIKO. Now the machine separates the clean and dirty areas of Zug's respiratory protective equipment workshop. It has become an important way to protect these men and women, who risk their lives in emergency situations, from fire-related cancer.