You should be using alcohol-free hand sanitizer on a regular basis…
- If you’re a politician, a professional athlete, a rock star or an always-on-the-go sales professional and you shake hands with a lot of people — including many you don’t know — on a regular basis;
- If you’re a bus driver, a flight attendant, a school teacher or a waitress and you work in a confined space occupied by large numbers of people — including many who are sick — on a regular basis; and
- If you’re a regular attendee at your house of worship and shake hands with a lot of people — including friends, acquaintances and people you’ve just met — on a regular basis.
Still using an alcohol-based hand sanitizer? Don’t worry! A safe, effective, non-toxic and alcohol-free alternative is available in the form of
Alcohol-Free Foam Hand Sanitizer.
Alcohol-Free Foam Hand Sanitizer kills well beyond the level of the leading alcohol-based hand sanitizers on the market (i.e., 99.999 percent kill rate against Staphylococcus aureus). It’s also the only formula on the market that’s been proven effective against both strains of the Norovirus. In addition, the active ingredient in
Alcohol-Free Foam Hand Sanitizer — benzalkonium chloride (BZK) — was proven effective against H1N1 (a.k.a.,”Swine Flu”) in a
study conducted two years ago.
Unlike other hand sanitizer products which contain BZK,
Alcohol-Free Foam Hand Sanitizer maximizes its effectiveness via the use of a unique surfactant package that allows that ingredient to penetrate cell walls at a higher rate. And, again, it does it without alcohol, an ingredient that dries out the skin and can damage the skin with repeated use.
As a special bonus when you order a six-pack of
Alcohol-Free Foam Hand Sanitizer for only $30, we’ll include shipping to any location within the continental U.S. absolutely free! That’s 750 applications — enough to last you almost six months at 5 applications per day.
Click here to order your personal supply of
Alcohol-Free Foam Hand Sanitizer.
Labels: H1N1 Swine Flu, Hand Sanitizer, mrsa staph infection, Norovirus, school cleaning
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