Nitrile Gloves – Low Volume Cost US inventory for California

GREENandSAVE Staff

Posted on Friday 7th August 2020
Nitrile Gloves

Nitrile Gloves – Low Volume Cost US inventory for California

Nitrile Gloves by top quality manufacturers at low cost are increasingly sought after from buyers in states like California. Public and private sector buyers in America face challenges with the resurgence of the COVID-19 virus. to help bring America back to some semblance of normal and to help reduce the spread of the COVID-19, Personal Protection Equipment (PPE) is key to reduce the burden on our healthcare systems and the tragic loss of human life. Preventive measures such as masks, frequent hand washing and social distancing are also key component to the ongoing fight against the pandemic. Getting 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. Across the spectrum of PPE, this is particularly the case for Nitrile Disposable Gloves. 

To learn more about PPE, to review examples of current US inventory, or to order volume shipment options at FACTORY-DIRECT costs, 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 LLC is an example of a leading company based in Louisiana. They have the experience and the ability to help corporation and 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. 

For support and ordering via email, please see: Sales@PPESourceInternational.com

Across our GREENandSAVE resources, our team welcomes the opportunity to provide our readers with updates to our readers on how your company may be assisting in the efforts to prevent the infections and overall rise in COVID-19.  Please feel free to Contact Us.

News updates on COVID-19 are key to stay current. See this example:

https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-08-06/california-tops-10-000-coronavirus-deaths-in-another-grim-milestone

The death toll from the coronavirus in California surpassed 10,000 people on Thursday, a mark that underscores how a state that was once hailed as a pandemic success story is now struggling to slow outbreaks.

The surge of the coronavirus in California over the last two months had several causes, including the reopening of the economy that allowed COVID-19 to spread rapidly among low-wage workers, many of them Latino essential workers whose employers haven’t followed new infection control rules. But summer celebrations among young people is also a recurring problem, and one particularly frustrating to officials trying to slow outbreaks.

As of Friday morning, California had at least 541,494 confirmed cases and 10,028 deaths. California now has more cases than any other state, but the death toll is still well below that of New York, which has recorded more than 32,700 fatalities.

Los Angeles County has by far the most deaths in the state, with at least 4,869. On Thursday, the county hit another somber milestone, topping 200,000 total cases.

A big problem persists in agricultural areas of California, such as the Central Valley. 

The eight-county San Joaquin Valley has seen hospitalizations increase 500% over the last two months.

There are some signs that the surge may be peaking in California on average, although it will take a few more weeks to know for sure. 

A Los Angeles Times analysis on Monday found that California has now experienced its first weekly reduction in new confirmed coronavirus cases for the first time in 12 weeks. For the seven-day period that ended Sunday, California reported 59,697 new coronavirus cases, a drop of 9% from the previous week of 65,634 cases, which was a record.

If the trends continue, it would mark a turning point after weeks of record hospitalizations that began in mid-June, the result of California starting to rapidly reopen the economy in May.

But a serious breakdown in the electronic collection of coronavirus test data has raised questions about how accurate the numbers are, frustrating health officials. Some public health officials have resorted to counting results by hand, and a growing number of counties have warned the public that statistics provided by the state on infection rates are unreliable.

The ongoing technical problems with the electronic system for gathering and analyzing COVID-19 infection rates affect the state’s ability to track the spread of the virus and could be resulting in significant undercounts of infections across the state.

The data processing problem, however, has not affected the tracking of hospitalizations. And hospitalizations statewide have begun to improve.

California experienced its highest number of average daily COVID-19 hospitalizations about two weeks ago; the week of July 20, there were an average of 6,969 people in hospitals statewide. That number fell last week to 6,632. That improvement was the first time in 10 weeks California has seen such a reduction in average daily hospitalizations.

 

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