When and How to Clean and Disinfect a Facility (original) (raw)

cleaning bucket on rollers with mops and brooms

Overview

The following recommendations are for buildings in community settings (such as offices, gyms, businesses, and community centers) and is not intended for healthcare settings or other facilities where specific regulations or practices for cleaning and disinfection may apply. These cleaning and disinfection recommendations are intended to help prevent the spread of harmful germs and do not apply to other materials (such as chemicals) that can be found on surfaces. Some germs are more difficult to remove or kill and might require specialized cleaning and disinfection. Always follow standard practices and appropriate regulations specific to your type of facility for cleaning and disinfection.

Cleaning

Cleaning with commercial cleaners that contain soap or detergent decreases the number of germs on surfaces and reduces risk of infection from surfaces in your facility. Cleaning alone removes most types of harmful germs (like viruses, bacteria, parasites, or fungi) from surfaces.

Sanitizing reduces the remaining germs on surfaces after cleaning.

Disinfecting can kill harmful germs that remain on surfaces after cleaning. By killing germs on a surface after cleaning, disinfecting can further lower the risk of spreading disease.

Clean surfaces before sanitizing or disinfecting them, because impurities like dirt may make it harder for sanitizing or disinfecting chemicals to kill germs.

Consider the type of surface and how often the surface is touched. Generally, high touch surfaces are more likely to spread germs. If the space is a high traffic area, you may choose to clean more frequently or disinfect in addition to cleaning.

When to clean surfaces

How to safely clean various surfaces

In most situations, cleaning regularly is enough to prevent the spread of germs. Always wash your hands with soap and water for 20 seconds after cleaning. Follow these tips to safely clean different surfaces in your facility:

For hard surfaces, such as counters, light switches, desks, and floors:

For soft surfaces, such as carpet, rugs, and drapes:

For laundry items, such as clothing, towels, and linens:

For electronics, such as tablets, touch screens, keyboards, remote controls, and ATM machines:

For outdoor areas, such as patios and sidewalks:

Disinfecting safely

When to disinfect

In addition to cleaning, disinfect areas of your facility where people have obviously been ill (for example, vomiting on facility surfaces). If the space is a high-traffic area, you may choose to clean more frequently or disinfect in addition to cleaning. During certain disease outbreaks, local health authorities might recommend specific disinfection procedures to reduce the risk of spreading disease within the facility.

How to disinfect safely

To disinfect, use an EPA-registered disinfecting product for the specific harmful germ (such as viruses or bacteria) if known. Not all disinfectants are effective for all harmful germs.

Clean the surface with soap and water first. Always read the label on disinfecting products to make sure the products can be used on the type of surface you are disinfecting (such as a hard or soft surface, food contact surface, or residual surface).

Follow these important safety guidelines when using chemical disinfectants:

In most cases, fogging, fumigation, and wide-area or electrostatic spraying are not recommended as primary methods of surface disinfection and have several safety risks, unless the product label says these methods can be used.

See EPA's Guidance for Cleaning & Disinfecting Public Spaces, Workplaces, Businesses, Schools and Homes.

Additional considerations for employers and facility operators

Develop policies to protect and train workers before assigning cleaning and disinfecting tasks. To protect workers from hazardous chemicals, training should include:

Employers must follow applicable Occupational Safety and Health Administration standards, including the hazard communication standard (29 CFR 1910.1200), personal protective equipment standards (29 CFR 1910 Subpart I), and other OSHA requirements, including those established by state plans, whenever such requirements apply.

Reminder‎

These recommendations are not intended for healthcare settings or for operators of facilities such as food and agricultural production or processing workplace settings, manufacturing workplace settings, food preparation and food service areas, or early care and education/childcare settings where specific regulations or practices for cleaning and disinfection may apply.

April 16, 2024