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Hebei Orient Imp. & Exp. Co, Ltd ORIENTMED was found in 2005, and its principal business focus on medical devices and medical instruments.

ORIENT Profile
ORIENTMED was found in 2005, and its principal business focus on medical devices and medical instruments. In addition, ORIENTMED develops some other business such as real estate and investment. ORIENTMED has six manufacturer groups and provide different kinds of medical products. The main products of ORIENTMED are Medical appareland protective wear, Mobility aids, Injection and infusion products, Surgical instruments,Medical respiratory products, Dental supplies,Sanitary nursing products,Gynaecological instruments, Medical catheter,Menthol series, Medical plaster,Diabetes test products, Digital test equipment,Diagnostic test products and etc. ORIENTMED`s products are more than 30 series, 400 categories and 60,000 specifications products, and she has become one of the most reliable suppliers of medical system solutions in the world. ORIENTMED insists on adjusting industry structure by technology innovation and improving the ability of independent innovation. Based on the excellent quality and reasonable prices, we have received good reputation from many different countries, such as Germany, France, Kazakhstan, Russia, Kuwait, Australia, South Africa, and so on

Quick View With 10 years of development and experience, ORIENTMED now serves the following markets: Hospital, Clinics, Dental, Food Service, Industrial, Homecare, Government and Consumer markets.; Geographically, HEBEI ORIENT provides its products to nearly every international marketplace with growing presence in USA,Canada, Europe,South America and most Asian countries.Our Vision:Becoming an excellent enterprise that all customers trust and staffs love! !Our Mission:Helping staffs grow and work together to create brilliance!Our values:Behavior: health, self-confidence, honesty, sharing, gratefulness!Action: profession, efficiency, teamwork, passion, and win-win!

06/06/2017

MedPage Today, a CE and CME accredited medical news service, provides free continuing education to healthcare professionals in addition to the latest news.

Can you sleep with a surgical mask?See http://www.orientmedcare.com/Or http://www.ortmed.cn/Is there a danger of CO2 bui...
24/05/2017

Can you sleep with a surgical mask?

See http://www.orientmedcare.com/
Or http://www.ortmed.cn/

Is there a danger of CO2 build up?
The usual surgical masks only offers protection against fluid splatters on one's facial skin, but not against inhaled droplets containing infectious materials like in SARS, avian influenza and probable pandemic influenza, since there is a great deal of leakage and it isn't face fitted, you know that those masses of East Asian people wearing surgical face masks on the streets during the influenza season won't accomplish anything medically useful, just a ritual or "medical myth"; to prevent droplet infection one needs to wear face fitted N95FFR (filtering facepiece respirators).
So why bother to sleep with a surgical mask? You not attending surgery there won't be any fluid/blood splatters, and it won't protect your against inhalational infections. Besides, most likely your face mask would be dislocated during your sleep.
The surgical face mask just causes a 3 mmHg extra inhalational resistance, so won't cause any worthwhile CO2 retention, for comparison NIOSH certification limits for FFR inspiratory and expiratory filter resistance are 35 and 25 mm Hg, Lerman et al have shown that an increase in inspiratory resistance from 3 mmH2O to 18mmH2O pressure results in a relative 3 percent increase (1.05 - 1.35 mmHg in absolute terms) in end-tidal CO2 level, and increasing the inspiratory resistance to 28 mm H2O pressure results in a 10 percent relative increase in end-tidal CO2 level so no more than 3.5 to 4.5 mmHg since normal end expiratory pCO2 is 5 - 6% equivalent to 35 to 45 mmHg.
After one hour of exercise on a treadmill while wearing a N95FFR (which has a far higher inhalational and exhalational resistance than a normal surgical mask see above) no rise of arterial pCO2 was seen see Table 3, so no CO2 retention. So nothing of importance.

Will A Surgical Mask Keep You Safe In A Viral Outbreak?(welcome visit: http://www.ortmed.cn; http://www.orientmedcare.co...
17/05/2017

Will A Surgical Mask Keep You Safe In A Viral Outbreak?
(welcome visit: http://www.ortmed.cn; http://www.orientmedcare.com/)

Folks used scarves in the worldwide flu epidemic in the early 1900s. In 2003, surgical masks became a common sight in China and Hong Kong during the SARS outbreak.

The masks come in a range of colors, patterns and styles. Some are stiff with elastic ear bands. Some are soft and pleated, made of synthetic or natural fibers. And some masks even have built-in respirators.

In Japan, the wearing of surgical masks by people coughing and sneezing has long been a common sight, perhaps out of politeness — it's rude to risk spreading your cold to strangers.

But do these masks work?

Here's what we do — and don't — know about how well surgical masks help prevent the spread of diseases at clinics, as well as in crowded malls and subways.

1. Masks can be helpful for protecting health workers from a variety of infectious diseases, including MERS.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends health care workers wear a mask with a respirator, called an N95 mask, to protect against MERS. N95 masks filter out 95 percent of infectious particles, the CDC says. In health care settings, these masks are individually fitted to the wearer to make sure the fit is tight.

But the effectiveness of regular surgical masks against MERS is still up for debate.

At least one study found surgical masks to be just as good at stopping influenza as N95 masks are. A head-to-head comparison, published in JAMA, the journal of the American Medical Association, found both masks worked equally well in preventing transmission of the flu in a hospital, when the masks were also used with disposable hospital gowns, gloves and other protections.

2. But either type of mask is less likely to do much good for the average person on the street.

N95 masks require a tight, proper fit. They also don't work on people with facial hair. And those with breathing problems, such as asthma patients, wouldn't tolerate them well, says Dr. Carol McLay, infection prevention consultant and CEO of Infection Control International.

The standard surgical mask is more convenient, and a thick, pleated mask offers the best filter. The standards organization ASTM International ranks surgical masks for their levels of protection. "Level three offers the highest protection. It's printed on the side of the box," McLay says.

Wearing a mask might make people feel better. After all, MERS has killed about a third of the people known to be infected.

But there are no good studies looking at how well these masks prevent MERS transmission out in the community, says Geeta Sood, an infectious disease specialist at Johns Hopkins University.

At least one study found surgical masks to be just as good at stopping influenza as N95 masks are. A head-to-head comparison, published in JAMA, the journal of the American Medical Association, found both masks worked equally well in preventing transmission of the flu in a hospital, when the masks were also used with disposable hospital gowns, gloves and other protections.

2. But either type of mask is less likely to do much good for the average person on the street.

N95 masks require a tight, proper fit. They also don't work on people with facial hair. And those with breathing problems, such as asthma patients, wouldn't tolerate them well, says Dr. Carol McLay, infection prevention consultant and CEO of Infection Control International.

The standard surgical mask is more convenient, and a thick, pleated mask offers the best filter. The standards organization ASTM International ranks surgical masks for their levels of protection. "Level three offers the highest protection. It's printed on the side of the box," McLay says.

Wearing a mask might make people feel better. After all, MERS has killed about a third of the people known to be infected.
Ebola In The Air: What Science Says About How The Virus Spreads
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Ebola In The Air: What Science Says About How The Virus Spreads

But there are no good studies looking at how well these masks prevent MERS transmission out in the community, says Geeta Sood, an infectious disease specialist at Johns Hopkins University.

"On the street or the subway, for MERS specifically, they're probably not effective," she says. One problem is that the masks are loose fitting, and a lot of tiny airborne particles can get in around the sides of the masks.

3. If you're sick yourself, wearing a mask might be a good idea.

The polite Japanese person who must be out and about with a cold or flu is right to think a surgical mask might protect strangers from picking up a pathogen. After all, the masks were originally designed to protect patients from the coughs and sneezes of a surgeon.

But better yet, stay home from work or school, and avoid crowds, Sood says.

4. If you find yourself in a situation where MERS is spreading, there are other strategies.

First, relax a bit. MERS isn't very contagious. A study, published last year in the New England Journal of Medicine, looked at 26 MERS patients in Saudi Arabia and followed 280 of the patients' household members to see if they caught the virus. Only 12 of the people were infected after two weeks, the study reported. That's a transmission rate of less than 5 percent.

And there are things people can do to cut their risk further, such as "very frequently hand-washing with soap and water, or using an alcohol-based hand rub," Sood says.

Also, don't hug and kiss people who are obviously sick or share plates and utensils. Regularly disinfect surfaces that are touched often, including doorknobs and faucet handles. And avoid touching your own eyes, nose and mouth.

Out on the street, try to observe a "social distance" rule of about 3 feet, McLay says. "You want to stay about a meter away from other people," she says. That's about the distance large particles in a sneeze can travel before hitting the ground.

Susan Brink

A simple introduction of N95 maskThe most common and affordable mask are known that the N95 masks. Despite beeing very a...
20/04/2017

A simple introduction of N95 mask

The most common and affordable mask are known that the N95 masks. Despite beeing very affordable (5 to 6 RMB a piece), the N95 are always among the top performing masks for Particulate Matter (i.e. PM2.5 Air Pollution). One of the great advantage for the mask, you can always take one with you without it taking much space. And if you forgot to take One, you can also get this mask from any convinience store in China (like 7-Eleven).
The "N95" label stands for the mask ability to filter out at least 95% of airborne particles larger than 0.3 microns (for reference, PM2.5 particules are 2.5 microns). From all the test result, N95 is good enough for filtering most of the PM2.5 particules, but sensitive persons can consider using N99 version of those masks (N99 stands for filterig more the 99% of airborne particles).

Note that to be really efficient, those masks should be used and worn properly to ensure a good "fit" with the face.

Address

No. 256 Xisanzhuang Street

050000

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Monday 08:00 - 17:00
Tuesday 08:00 - 17:00
Wednesday 08:00 - 17:00
Thursday 08:00 - 17:00
Friday 08:00 - 17:00

Telephone

+86 18132160936

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