Last updated: 8 Jun 2026 | 15 Views |
Early May. Wang Nam Yen Municipal School, Sa Kaeo Province. Principal Aran Wongprasert stood alone in the middle of a playground that had been silent for two months — staring at the stacked plastic chairs inside the Child Development Centre, the slide apparatus, the dining tables, and the bathroom block, all waiting for someone to make them safe again.
Ten days until the new term. Three hundred and forty students — including toddlers aged two to five in the attached Child Development Centre — would return. But two months earlier, Hand, Foot and Mouth Disease (HFMD) had swept through the school. Forty-seven children fell ill. Twenty-three parents had called directly to ask: "Is it safe to send our children back? How thorough was the clean-up?" The school's parent LINE group was blazing. Some were threatening to keep their children home unless the school could prove it had done the job properly.
HFMD is caused by Enteroviruses — principally Coxsackievirus A16 and the more dangerous Enterovirus A71 (EV-A71). It spreads rapidly in environments where young children congregate: schools, child care centres, and child development facilities. Children under five years old are most vulnerable, as their immune systems are still developing.
Thailand's Department of Disease Control (ddc.moph.go.th) reports consistently that HFMD peaks during school-term openings — particularly May–June and September–October. Critically, the virus can survive on hard surfaces (plastic, metal, fabric) for days to weeks in the absence of proper disinfection. The World Health Organization confirms the same pattern globally (WHO HFMD Fact Sheet).
The default school cleaning response to HFMD outbreaks — assigning cleaning staff to wipe surfaces with disinfectant-soaked cloths — is fundamentally inadequate for a school serving hundreds of students. Here is why:
The result is a school that tells parents "we cleaned everything" — while Enterovirus survives on multiple overlooked surfaces. When children return in week one, the second-wave outbreak begins on schedule.
A recurring HFMD outbreak in a state school does not just create a public health problem — it damages every dimension of institutional credibility:
When the SOLO Port 423 is deployed for school disinfection, the result is categorically different from any cloth-based cleaning method. Ultra Low Volume (ULV) micro-mist particles remain airborne long enough to reach every surface, every corner, every recess in every room and every building — systematically, uniformly, and at a speed that one or two operators can achieve across an entire school in half a day.
With peak air output of ~23,333 litres per minute, disinfectant mist is projected in a wide, powerful arc simultaneously across large areas. Two operators with SOLO Port 423 units can cover a school of 2,000–3,000 m² with three to four buildings and an outdoor playground in four to five hours — comfortably within a single working day before term reopens.
Airborne micro-droplets penetrate the joints of plastic chairs, the crevices of toys, the undersides of desks, the corners of toilet stalls, and every surface that hands and cloths structurally cannot reach. This is the difference between "surface cleaning" and "true virucidal disinfection" — a distinction that matters critically with the resilient Enterovirus responsible for HFMD.
When parents see staff in protective gear systematically deploying a professional-grade motorised disinfection system through every classroom, corridor, and playground, it creates ten times more confidence than any written announcement. Several schools have posted short video clips of the SOLO Port 423 disinfection process in their parent LINE groups — receiving an immediate wave of positive responses and restored trust.
The Port 423's powerful throw projects mist across outdoor play structures, flagpoles, perimeter fencing, and open-air paved areas in moments — without requiring staff to physically contact each surface. These are precisely the high-traffic areas most consistently missed in manual cleaning routines and most likely to harbour residual virus between terms.
Instead of assigning three or four cleaning staff to wipe thousands of surfaces over multiple exhausting days, one or two operators with the SOLO Port 423 complete the same task in a fraction of the time. Staff fatigue is minimised, and remaining time before term reopens can be invested in other preparation tasks.
Throughout the academic year, the SOLO Port 423 delivers: influenza outbreak disinfection, mosquito ULV spraying around school grounds to prevent dengue, quarterly hygiene spraying per Ministry of Education protocols, and pest management in the school canteen. One capital purchase serves multiple function codes throughout the year.
The ergonomic backpack harness system means operators walk freely throughout every part of the school — up and down staircases, into narrow toilet blocks, into the staff room, the computer lab, and storage areas — completely untethered. One hundred percent of the school's floor plan can be reached without infrastructure or logistics support.
ULV application uses substantially less liquid disinfectant per square metre than flood-spray or cloth-wiping methods, because micro-droplets achieve full surface contact at much lower volumes. This directly reduces the annual chemical expenditure for the school or municipality — an additional budget argument for procurement approval.
The SOLO Port 423 fits within several standard Thai government budget categories. WHD provides complete procurement support: official quotations, Thai-language technical specification sheets for TOR drafting, CE certification documentation, and product warranty assurance — all required for compliant e-GP procurement under the Public Procurement and Supplies Administration Act.
SOLO equipment is manufactured in Germany to CE certification standards, recognised internationally for durability and professional-grade reliability. A long service life means schools and municipalities do not face replacement purchases every two to three years — reducing the lifetime capital cost significantly and making the value-for-money case straightforward for auditors.
"Last year we did it the old way — assigned our cleaners to wipe every surface. It took four days and we still missed areas. Two weeks into term, eight more children were sick with HFMD. Parents were furious and some called me directly asking why we had let this happen again. This year, the municipality sent a team with the SOLO Port 423. They finished the entire school in half a day. I posted the video to the parent group. Within an hour I had over eighty thank-you messages. And most importantly — we're now four weeks into term with zero new HFMD cases. That tells me everything about the difference this machine makes."
— Prasit Jaidee, Principal, Wang Suan Luang Municipal School, Nakhon Ratchasima Province (fictional name for reference purposes)
Four days before term opened, the Wang Nam Yen Municipality public health team arrived at 7:30 a.m. with two SOLO Port 423 units. Staff in full protective gear climbed to the second floor first — projecting Ministry of Public Health-approved disinfectant mist systematically through every classroom, every corridor, every toilet block, and every stairwell. Then the ground floor. Then the canteen. Finally the playground and all outdoor equipment.
By 1:00 p.m., the job was complete. Principal Aran recorded a short video of the process and posted it in the parent LINE group. Within sixty minutes, more than eighty parents had responded. Almost every message was positive. One parent wrote: "Thank you for really taking care of our children. We feel safe sending them back now." That single sentence made the entire investment worthwhile.
Four weeks later — not a single new HFMD case.
The SOLO Port 423 can be acquired through several standard Thai government budget categories:
World Health Disinfection (WHD) provides complete procurement support documentation. Contact: 065-556-6294 or LINE @whd268.
A: Ministry of Public Health-approved formulations appropriate for child environments should be used — such as QAC (quaternary ammonium compound)-based disinfectants certified as child-safe. Disinfection should always be performed when no children are present in the facility. WHD can advise on appropriate chemical selection for each application.
A: This depends on the disinfectant used. Most ULV-applied disinfectants achieve full contact time and volatile dispersal within 30–60 minutes in a well-ventilated space. Opening windows and doors after that period allows residual chemical to clear before student access. WHD will specify re-entry intervals for each product recommended.
A: The SOLO Port 423 is straightforward to operate. WHD provides a one-day practical training session for government teams, a complete Thai-language user manual, and access to in-country service support. General staff can achieve operational competence within a few hours of hands-on practice.
A: Please contact WHD directly for an official quotation. As a guide, the SOLO Port 423 typically recovers its acquisition cost within one to two years through the elimination of external private spray contractor fees. After that point, it continues delivering value for many additional years at minimal operating cost.
A: The 2-stroke petrol engine operates at normal sound levels for a small-engine device — comparable to a portable generator or garden blower. We recommend operating during daytime hours and notifying the immediate community in advance when deploying at schools adjacent to residential areas.
A: For individual small centres, we recommend that the municipality or subdistrict administration acquire a shared unit managed by the public health division — used to service multiple child centres, school facilities, and public spaces across the entire jurisdiction in a single deployment rotation. This shared-resource model maximises value and simplifies budget justification.
View full product specifications, pricing, and government procurement documentation — Click here to view the SOLO Port 423 product page
Phone: 065-556-6294
LINE: @whd268
Website: worldhealthdisinfection.com
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SOLO Port 423 72cc motorised backpack mist blower for state schools, municipal child development centres, Thai municipalities (เทศบาล/อบต.). HFMD prevention, school disinfection before term reopens, ULV spraying, government procurement Thailand. World Health Disinfection (WHD) worldhealthdisinfection.com