Nitrile Gloves – Factory Direct and US inventory for Tennessee

GREENandSAVE Staff

Posted on Monday 3rd August 2020
Nitrile Gloves

Nitrile Gloves – Factory Direct and US inventory for Tennessee

Nitrile Gloves by quality manufacturers are increasingly in demand in states like Tennessee that face challenges with the resurgence of COVID-19. To help reduce the spread of the COVID-19 and to help bring America back to some semblance of normal, Personal Protection Equipment (PPE) is key to prevent the additional toll on our healthcare systems and on human life. Hand washing, masks, and social distancing are also key component to the ongoing fight against COVID-19. Low cost US inventory of Nitrile Gloves in American warehouses is an advantage for volume buyers who seek to use the PPE or resell it. This is particularly the case for Nitrile Disposable Gloves. 

For more information on PPE, to see examples of current inventory, or to order FACTORY-DIRECT volume shipments, please see: Personal Protection Equipment. You can also click here for ultraviolet disinfection technology that includes options for duct integration in Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning (HVAC) systems, portable UVC disinfection fixtures, and devices for wall mounting in rooms.

PPE Source International is based in Louisiana and has the experience and the ability to help hospital groups, other end users, distributors, and resellers with Nitrile Glove inventory and volume orders at under $12 per box of 100 Nitrile Disposable Gloves, as well as Isolation Gown inventory, IR forehead thermometersKN95 Medical Masks, and other PPE, including, civilian KN95 masks, and gel hand sanitizer in a range of sizes. 

Support and ordering via email: Sales@PPESourceInternational.com

At GREENandSAVE, our team welcomes the opportunity to provide updates to our readers on how your company may be assisting in the efforts to reduce the infections and overall spread of COVID-19.  Please Contact Us.

Trends and news on COVID-19 are key for staying up to date. Here is an example:

First Article:

https://www.wkrn.com/community/health/coronavirus/dekalb-county-schools-delay-reopening-after-employee-test-positive-for-covid-19/

SMITHSVILLE, Tenn. (WKRN) — DeKalb County Schools has announced that they will be delaying the start of the school year due to an employee testing positive of coronavirus.

The Director of Schools Patrick Cripps told WJLE, a Smithsville, Tennessee radio affiliate, the employee that tested positive and all employees that may have come in contact with the virus are under quarantine. Cripps consulted with DeKalb County Schools and the Tennessee School Boards Association before making this decision.

"We were notified that we have had a positive result in one of our employees at a building. That employee recently reported feeling not well, then went home, followed all the protocols, and was tested. That employee received the test results today and it was positive. We immediately told that employee you have to be quarantined according to what the CDC recommends for 10 days plus a 24 hour day without a fever before you can return to work,” said Director Patrick Cripps.

The reopening date has been rescheduled from August 3 to August 17. There will be no remote learning during this two week period as the school board will have to decide later how to make up the lost days.

Second Article:

https://fox17.com/news/local/coronavirus-pandemic-spreading-in-tennessees-smaller-cities-covid-19-nashville-rural

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WZTV) — A newly released from Vanderbilt University's Schools of Medicine shows the coronavirus is spreading beyond large metro areas.  

In fact, Vanderbilt's report said smaller metro areas are seeing a growth in both COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations.

Some factors that could be impacting this are mitigation strategies like mask mandates or limitations on large group gatherings.

Last week, top U.S. coronavirus official Dr. Deborah Birx urged all Tennessee mayors to issue mask mandates and spoke about the virus spreading in rural areas.

Vanderbilt's report breaks down trends within several different areas: large Metro areas, like Nashville and Memphis, smaller metro areas like Clarksville, Chattanooga and Knoxville, rural areas adjacent to all metro areas and rural areas not adjacent to any metro areas.

Early on the in pandemic, three quarters of Tennessee's new infections were concentrated in Nashville and Memphis. But the new reports show the majority of new coronavirus infections in Tennessee are originating in communities outside the largest metropolitan areas surrounding Nashville and Memphis.

"It is worth noting that this change has occurred in the context of high overall numbers of new reported cases—so it does not necessarily mean that large metro areas are experiencing fewer cases than they had earlier in the pandemic," Vanderbilt said in its report.

Vanderbilt said the geographic profile of hospitalized COVID-19 patients has seen similar changes over time.

"For example, on May 1, 11% of hospitalized patients were in facilities located in small metro areas. By late July, hospitals in small metro areas were treating 44% of hospitalized patients statewide," Vanderbilt said. "It is worth noting that our estimates likely understate the growing burden outside of the major metro areas, as several hospitals in Nashville and Memphis are also treating patients from the adjacent and rural communities."

Vanderbilt said this increase in hospitalizations in smaller areas could lead to a potential stress on healthcare systems in areas with fewer staffing and bed resources.

"There is also the potential that as numbers increase in those areas, depleted health care resources may result in transfers of patients back to facilities in metro areas," Vanderbilt said. "It is critical to watch these trends and to ensure that communities that are being hardest hit are able to respond quickly and adequately."

Tennessee topped 109,000 virus cases so far this week.

 

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