Last updated: 10 Jun 2026 | 53 Views |
Young children are a community future. Proper disinfection is the first line of defense a local agency can provide.
Teacher Ann (name withheld), a caregiver at a municipal child-development center, recalls with weary frustration: one morning a parent dropped off a three-year-old and noticed clear blisters on the child palms and inside the mouth. Within three days, seven more children were sick. The center had to close on an emergency basis, parents called nonstop, and some posted in the village LINE group that the center was dirty and careless about cleanliness.
The truth was that staff wiped floors and toys with disinfectant every day, but the hand-foot-mouth virus (Enterovirus / Coxsackievirus) lingers in the grooves of toys, on surfaces, on door handles, and in dead corners that cloths cannot reach. Ordinary wiping is simply not enough to break the transmission cycle in a space where children touch everything and put it in their mouths.
The Department of Disease Control notes that HFMD is most common in children under five and peaks at the start of term and in the rainy season. It spreads through mucus, saliva, blister fluid, and feces, transmitting easily where children gather. The recurring problems local agencies face are:
Instead of wiping point by point, proactive municipalities use the ULV SOLO PORT423 fogger to spray disinfectant as a mist under 30 microns that reaches every corner, every toy, surface, handle, and dead space, covering a whole room in minutes, at the same disinfection level hospitals use.
Before: Toys wiped one by one, never in time, germs lingering in crevices, children falling sick, the center closing, anxious complaining parents.
After: The whole center fogged each evening after class in 20 minutes, the transmission cycle broken, sick children clearly reduced, parents confident and praising the municipality care.
Once the municipality provided our center with a SOLO PORT423, we could disinfect ourselves every day after the children leave, with no waiting for the central team. This outbreak season far fewer children fell ill, and parents are much more at ease.
— Head of a municipal child-development center
Caring for child-development centers and schools is a core mission of municipalities. Procuring a quality fogger means specifying a ULV droplet size under 30 microns, sufficient spray range and tank capacity to serve many rooms and centers, and an engine with in-country service. The World Health Disinfection team is ready to prepare quotations and certification documents for correct, transparent government procurement.
See the SOLO PORT423 ULV fogger product and pricing click here
Call our team: 065-556-6294
LINE: @whd268
Q: Is the sprayed liquid safe for children?
A: Choose certified, safe disinfectants, fog when children are absent, and observe the recommended wait time before children return.
Q: How many centers can one machine serve?
A: With a 12-liter tank and light weight, one machine easily rotates among several centers in a municipality.
Q: Are government-procurement documents available?
A: Yes, quotations, certifications, and specifications. Contact 065-556-6294.
Read about HFMD from the Department of Disease Control and hygiene guidance from the World Health Organization (WHO). Explore more equipment and services at World Health Disinfection.
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