In loving memory of Connie Concelmo 1-23-1923  to  3-13-2005

Victim of MRSA
 

Learn More about MRSA by clicking here

 

What is Commando Carpet Cleaning doing to prevent the spread of MRSA around the Central Florida Area?

Our dedication to help stop the spread of this horrific superbug is astronomical and we are willing to make enormous sacrifices to make our services affordable and to defeat this superbug that has already claimed so many life’s that probably could have been prevented. Commando Carpet Cleaning has set in-place a very affordable pricing plan that will fit everyone’s budget.

MRSA is a major public health problem says Dr. Jennifer Rhodin, M.D, who is one of the top specialist in infectious disease. The MRSA Superbug is spreading so fast and all over in our schools, homes, vehicles, grocery stores, doctor offices, lets just say everywhere. This is because we have become too relaxed, and we should be more vigilant. Commando Carpet Cleaning will come into your home or office and provide the most thorough cleaning with one of the few chemicals used and able to kill the superbug or other forms of bacteria. Rest assured that the chemicals used are totally safe for the entire family and pets. All chemicals are approved by the EPA and the food and drug administration.

Starting from the top leaving no areas of your home un-cleaned, then finishing up the entire process with having your carpets steamed cleaned with hot steam and special chemicals used to kill all bacteria including MRSA in your carpets. Then working our way to you upholstery and then finishing up with having your tile and grout cleaned and sealed.

If you wondering and asking questions that this is a lot of cleaning and it probably is expensive, you can be rest assured that Commando Carpet Cleaning is more interested in helping control this horrific superbug that most likely lead to an epidemic in the very near future if not controlled now. Commando Carpet Cleaning guarantees to provide affordable pricing for everyone. “Guaranteed”!

The president of the company knows first- hand about the seriousness of MRSA because he was infected with the superbug and endured a fierce battle defeating it. This is why you can relax and enjoy the comfortable feeling of a MRSA free home or work-place without the stress of a financial set back. MRSA information. http://www.tahilla.typepad.com/mrsawatch/infection_patterns/index.html 


Read what's happening in Tucson:

As if threats of pandemic superflu weren't enough, yet another new and potentially fatal "superbug" is spreading worldwide — including in Tucson.
 

No mere threat, this bug has infected hundreds of Tucsonans already and hospitalized dozens, some with life-threatening illness.
 

Appearing at first as just a pimple, maybe a small cut, the infection often is mistaken by many victims — and their doctors — for a spider bite, delaying vital treatment.
 

Known as MRSA — methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus or "mersa" — it is in fact a highly contagious bacteria that has developed strong resistance to most antibiotics, making it hard to treat and setting the stage for dangerous invasive disease.
 

Mersa itself is actually nothing new. This resistant form of staph bacteria has been around for decades, but was limited mostly to outbreaks in hospital and nursing-home patients.
 

What's alarming doctors and public-health officials now is that mersa has moved into the general public — often infecting young people who have been nowhere near a hospital.
 

Infection begins on the skin, triggering inflammation, boils or nasty abscesses that can take weeks of treatment to stop — including surgery and hospitalization. But if it moves to the bloodstream, mersa can cause bone infection, lung-damaging pneumonia, organ damage, even fatal toxic shock syndrome.
 

Several Tucson emergency rooms report treating some 500 cases of mersa this year — triple the number seen just two years ago.
 

"It is absolutely the new superbug, and everyone is worried about it now," said Dr. Sean Elliott, a University of Arizona pediatrician who handles mersa in young patients.
 

"What is significant is that we are seeing lots of healthy individuals from the community who have developed severe skin disease, with more and more ending up as surgical cases, and some progressing to severe invasive disease."
 

In the past month, Elliott has treated five children with this form of life-threatening mersa. All have survived.
He has seen patients end up with chronic lung disease or disabled limbs after a mersa battle. He has handled nearly 30 entire families affected by it this year.
 

"This is a big one," he said. "It's not a cause for panic yet, but it's a bad player."
 

Unlike past years, mersa now can strike anyone anywhere, without warning or risk — an unexplained phenomenon occurring in developed countries worldwide.
 

However, no one yet knows the magnitude of mersa's spread. Exploding only in the past two years, "community-acquired" mersa has been reported in clusters in cities throughout the United States. But cases are not required to be officially confirmed to the government.


 

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