Why Protective Clothing
Because textiles are an infection and transmission risk
- Textiles provide a large hosting surface area for bacteria and viruses, benefiting their carryover.
- Viruses and bacteria can remain active on textile surfaces from days to months
- Human coronavirus (SARS-CoV) can persist for up to 2 days on surgical gowns at room temperature
In light of the global pandemic due to COVID-19, consumers are showing the trend to seek health protecting products, and that includes protective clothing. The novel coronavirus spreads through droplets and aerosols from person to person. 2 Everyday we walk through micro droplets of residual sneezes and coughs. The aerosol droplets stay suspended for hours in the air we breathe, and attach to our clothing, hands and faces, which expose us to routes of viral ingestion.
Study shows that SARS-CoV, a similar virus to SARS-CoV-2 (the virus that causes COVID-19) can survive 2 days on a textile surface. While there hasn’t been such complete study on SARS-CoV-2 yet, one cannot rule out the same persistence of this virus on textiles.
So you might be bringing the virus home on your textile or your face mask, and there’s always a risk that you touch the textile and then don’t wash your hands properly before you change your outdoor clothing to indoor clothing, for instance. Then, there’s always the risk that you’ll touch your face and get infected that way.
That’s exactly the risk that we want to mitigate. We want to make the textile surface such that the virus and bacteria are deactivated immediately in a short time – and we’re talking minutes.
