Is your bathroom a mess after a toilet overflow? Did a sewer backup ruin your floors and rugs? Call The BioClean Team ASAP. We offer sewage and biohazard cleanup services in Southern California, CA.
It takes specialized equipment to deal with potentially hazardous materials. That’s why you should leave the biohazard and sewage cleanups to our professionals. We’ll clean, sanitize and deodorize the area. Our goal is to make the space look even better than it was before the accident.
We’re discreet while performing sewage and biohazard cleanup services in Southern California, CA. Reach out to us now to schedule our services.
Call anytime, 24/7/365, to speak with a professional and get a quote or start the RFP process for long term service.
The BioClean Team remediates the job site following regulations and health codes to make the space safe and usable again.
While you get your space back to normal, we work with the insurance company to get the bill paid.
You’ll need more than a mop and bucket to clean up biohazard accidents. Instead of risking an inadequate cleanup, turn to the professionals at The BioClean Team. We can clean up:
We’ll work efficiently to make your property sparkle again. Contact us today to deep clean your property after a biohazard accident.
There are several diseases that you or a loved one can encounter due to:
To ensure that you and your loved ones are safe from these diseases, it is imperative that you hire The BioClean Team.
The following is a list of diseases caused by sewage or sewage contaminated water that can occur in the United States. For more information about methaemoglobinaemia, visit the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s web site . For more information on any of the other diseases, visit the Federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s website.
Campylobacteriosis is the most common diarrheal illness in the United States. The infection is caused by the bacterium Campylobacter. While some people exhibit no symptoms, clinical manifestations include bloody diarrhea, cramping, abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting and fever within 2 to 5 days after exposure to the organism. In the immunocompromised, Campylobacter occasionally spreads to the bloodstream and causes a life-threatening infection.
A disease caused by the microscopic parasite Cryptosporidium parvum. It is protected by an outer shell that allows it to survive outside the body for long periods of time and makes it very resistant to chlorine disinfection. Cryptosporidiosis (also known as “Crypto”) is the most common waterborne disease in the United States. The parasite is found in every region of the United States and throughout the world. While some people exhibit no symptoms, most experience diarrhea, loose or watery stools, stomach cramps, upset stomach, and a slight fever.
Two acute, inflammatory viral diseases (St. Louis Encephalitis and West Nile Virus Encephalitis) are transmitted via the bite of infected mosquitoes, primarily of the Culex species. Culex mosquitoes prefer to lay their eggs in heavily polluted water such as that contaminated by sewage. These viruses are amplified during periods of adult mosquito blood-feeding by continuous transmission between mosquito vectors and bird reservoir hosts. Infectious mosquitoes carry viruses in their salivary glands and infect susceptible birds during blood-feeding. Some birds will sustain the virus in their blood stream for one to four days subsequent to exposure, after which they develop life-long immunity.
A sufficient number of mosquitoes must feed on an infected bird to ensure that some survive the period during which the blood meal is digested to feed again on another susceptible bird. People are not known to develop infectious levels of the virus, and thus cannot propagate the reservoir-host infection cycle. Most people exhibit no symptoms, and the diseases are of short duration. However, in severe infections symptoms can include high fever with head and body aches, stiff neck, muscle weakness, disorientation, tremors, convulsions and, in the most severe cases, coma or paralysis. The illness can be severe for infants, the elderly, and those who are immunocompromised. No vaccine exists for encephalitis.