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Self-employed owners save you money |
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888-431-7233 Usually under $1,200 any day in Nevada. |
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My suicide cleanup service includes the following:
Some of my education and training:
Suicide Cleanup Prices for Nevada My suicide cleanup work prices reflect my self-employed costs, which give me a big edge over my suicide cleanup competitors' prices. In California I work as a suicide cleanup practitioner for under $1,000 per suicide. There's an exception here. Shotgun suicides often cost more than $1,000 because of additional hours and supplies. Most suicides take less than one day to clean decontaminate. I like at least two days for shotgun suicides because of unforeseen issues. Still, I remain well under my competitors' prices. Double suicides also cost more, but this needs to be discussed. Suicide cleanup prices will very depending upon these events:
I write about corruption in our local governments as it relates to suicide cleanup. See this information to learn how our local government employees create a monopoly to own suicide cleanup businesses as monopolies. Read more about corruption in Orange County Government.
Blood and Biohazard Cleanup affect overall prices. Many times blood found on a suicide scene will have made its way to seams between floors and walls. This material must remain until a more general suicide cleanup takes place. Then, if needed, demolition of part of a wall or floor may follow. There's no way around this work. It must be done because short-cuts leads to problems later on, like flies, maggots, and terrible death odors. Like other biohazard cleanup work during a death cleanup, a suicide cleanup are much like those found during crime scene cleanup or an unattended death cleanup. They may be wet, moist, or dried flaky blood. Tissues found during suicide cleanup will also fall within the biohazard domain of cleaning. Such blood or tissue from crime scenes, suicides, and unattended deaths may be contaminated with bloodborne pathogens. We must assume that all blood has such contamination. Infectious environments must be isolated until all cleaning, disinfecting, and removal of suicide cleanup related material is carried out. Special attention to contact with and splashing blood should compel cleaners to pay attention. Blood cleanup work requires focus and patients at all times. A novice must pay attention to detail after planning ahead. I clean for the toddler. You must do the same. Never remove biohazardous material without wearing gloves. "For cleaning blood or bloody fluids from floors, bed, etc., you can use household rubber gloves." Wear protection over eyes, nose, and mouth. Have a safe means of exit and a place to decontaminate yourself and clothing. Blood as a biohazard will consist of wet or moist blood, or dried flaky (scabbing) blood. Adding chemicals to blood, something like bleach, will either destroy the blood or destroy its source of food or both. Bleach will begin to break down once in contact with blood, or any other organic matter. Dried blood that flakes may easily become aerosolized if mishandled. Contact with airborne blood places the cleaner at risk of infectious disease. Before removing, moisten flaking (scabbing) blood. Cause it not to become airborne. Cover flaked blood with paper towels and lightly moisten with a disinfectant (bleach) from afar. Use a spray bottle while making wide, misting applications to the paper towels' surface. Before removing blood, ensure that it is moist enough not to flake, but not dripping. Dry paper towels may be used to contain wet blood. Allow towels to dwell until dry. Flush in small quantities, or gently place inside two thick plastic bags. Seal tightly with duct tape. Directly dispose of in a landfill.TOP Dripping wet blood is considered biohazardous and universally considered infectious until proven otherwise. Contain blood from afar; disinfect it. Pour blood down the sanitary sewer if you are not going to seal it for transfer. Thoroughly wash hands. See Blood Cleanup 1, blood cleanup 2, and blood cleanup 3. General. Universal precautions shall be observed to prevent contact with blood or other potentially infectious materials. Under circumstances in which differentiation between body fluid types is difficult or impossible, all body fluids shall be considered potentially infectious materials. (return) Useful disinfectants may be found here: Blood Spills: see index at http://www.bccdc.org/downloads/pdf/epid/reports/CDManual_ Vinegar: http://www.apple-cider-vinegar-benefits.com/vinegar-as-a-disinfectant.html The Center for Disease Control recommends using chemicals or autoclave to decontaminate. This recommendation is made in the context of laboratory work. In the home, on the crime scene, my philosophy is not to tolerate biowaste that may be biohazardous. I destroy and/or encapsulate any offending materials. I see no point in exposing anyone to needlessly exposing anyone to pathogens. Household bleach is a wonderful, but very corrosive disinfectant. It is a "midrange disinfectant." Bleach has a wide bacterial killing spectrum. It is inexpensive and found on most market shelves. However, bleach is extremely dangerous in the presence of acids, including urine. Open bleach bottles lose their strength; it loses strength when applied to organic material, like blood and decomposing matter. Bleach must be used cautiously, wisely. (return)TOP
Violent deaths often cause serious loss of blood and tissue, OPIM (Other Potentially Infectious Materials). This blood and tissue loss creates environmental odors. These odors permiate cellular materials and sometimes require special treatment if not a long period of time for nature to take its course.
Sometimes these odors linger when poor ventilation slows their dispersal. Sometimes these odors linger because of deep material penetration. Materials like fabrics, paper, wood, and other objects easily become saturated by death odors.
I work hard at removing odors during suicide cleanup. Sometimes when a suicide victim remains down for days and week, it becomes hard to remove all of death's odors. What happens is that the cells within blood and tissue off-gas as they decompose. Also, enzymes break down these cells and tissues and as they do so more gas fills the surrounding area. Because of the sulfur and uric acids present in this gas, it permeates materials with a cellular content, manmade of nature grown. Chairs, tables, and other furnishings with composite wood become permitted with death's odors. Paper, clothing, even drywall becomes saturated with these odors. We do our best to remove the odors associated with crime scenes and other death scenes. However, removing the source material will not always return the scene to its pre-incident condition for some time. Time and heavy ventilation, and removal of miasma permeated materials will help return the scene to a more "normal" condition.
Almost all of my chemicals come from Home Depot and other general merchant stores. In this way my clients know what I'm using or can find what I've used. I figure that if these products remain on store shelves year after year, then the public accepts them as safe or nearly so. Besides, they work. What's better than a market product that works with safety wording clients can read? Most of these over-the-counter chemicals make note of a 99.9% kill ratio for bloodborne pathogens like HIV and Hepatitis C. Cleaning after a blood loss such as suicide requires use of chemicals. I apply these chemicals from a distance. I also applies these chemicals directly into bags and other containers as I work. It's important to me to destroy bloodborne pathogens before blood cleanup work continues. In this way I stay ahead of problem causing oversights. My belief is that biohazards should no longer be biohazards when they leave a business or residence. Why expose others needlessly for the sake of carrying out needless risk taking? Besides, in this way, I reduce suicide's odors as I work. By the time I'm done with suicide cleanup work I know what death odors actually remain within the death scene. |
Most people call me Ed Evans, but because my elderly mother still calls me Eddie Evans, I go by Eddie Evans in my business life. Besides, Eddie sound more friendly. At least, I think that it does. I use it for suicide cleanup marketing throughout these United States.Readers may wonder why I have marketing across these United States over the year; much more so in the past than in the present, I kept suicide cleanup pages in most states. At first I did some of this to help those in need of suicide cleanup services find help. Then after a while I started referring callers to different companies (no charge to anyone), and then I made a subscription service from these suicide cleanup pages. For a couple years all went well and my suicide cleanup company subscribers found this approach worked well. Plus, I made enough back to pay for my costs and kept a small bit as a profit. Then cronyism in our local government took over suicide cleanup business through near total monopolies. I mean, coroner, administrator, and other civil servants referred families of suicide victims to civil servants' friends and relatives. In some cases they simply referred to suicide cleanup companies for a referral fee, which sometimes comes to thousands of dollars. Orange County, California is the worst of these counties, as best as I can tell. It has a 100% monopoly over suicide cleanup in the Orange County area. How do I know? I know because I have hundreds of web pages offering death cleanup services in Orange County and I do not receive calls to clean in Orange County. How else might anyone explain this odd situation? Our coroner's employees reach family victims of a suicide. They give suicide cleanup company information to these families, and then direct these families to go to these selected companies. This happens in our county administration department (see this Orange County Government fraud document), fire department, and elsewhere as best as I can tell. A crime scene cleanup company becomes entangled in this Orange County fraud when a county employee approaches it for a referral fee. Or, sometimes a crime scene cleanup company approaches county employees to refer suicide cleanup work to its owner. Then, as mentioned above, employees refer suicide victim's families to their own suicide cleanup company or companies owne by friends and relatives. As a result of all of this corruption in our local governments, I created Orange County Consumer Fraud to begin fighting back against crimes against survivors of homicide, suicide, and unattended deaths. AGUSTA-SUICIDE-CLEANUP.COM |
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