UMF | PERFECTCLEAN launches curtain contamination device for hospitals

2 hours ago
UMF PERFECTCLEAN has introduced CPULL with Micrillon, a device designed to reduce hand-to-curtain contamination in hospital patient rooms. The company says the product addresses privacy curtains that can become contaminated within days and will be shown at APIC 2026 in Nashville. Why it matters: - Hospital privacy curtains can become contaminated quickly, creating a patient-safety risk that routine laundry schedules often do not address. - CPULL with Micrillon is designed to give staff, patients, and visitors a hard-surface pull point instead of touching curtain fabric directly. - The product aims to reduce contamination without changing EVS workflow or adding steps. What happened: - UMF PERFECTCLEAN launched CPULL with Micrillon, a patented device for hospital patient rooms. - The device clamps onto reusable or disposable curtains. - The launch was announced June 16, 2026. - CPULL will be featured at UMF booth #1203 at the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology’s APIC 2026 in Nashville, June 15-17. The details: - CPULL creates a single hard-surface target for moving privacy curtains. - The company says the design removes the primary pathway for pathogens to accumulate on curtain material. - When cleaned and disinfected with a chlorine-based product such as PERFECTCLEAN’s Klorese, the Micrillon surface becomes charged with chlorine atoms. - UMF PERFECTCLEAN says those chlorine atoms help inhibit biofilm formation and are effective against bacteria, fungi, yeast and viruses. - CPULL can be wiped down with any EPA-registered disinfectant during daily cleaning. - The company says there are no new tools, no added steps and no workflow disruption. - The EPA has determined Micrillon is a chlorine atom delivery system. - The company says the material delivers chlorine atoms to its surface, where they kill bacteria, yeast and mold and inactivate viral proteins in minutes. - UMF PERFECTCLEAN says the same chlorine atoms also prevent biofilm from forming on the surface. - Peer-reviewed research has shown privacy curtains can become grossly contaminated with pathogens including MRSA and VRE within four to eight days of hanging. - Many facilities launder curtains only every four to six months or longer because of labor and budget constraints. - CPULL can be cleaned, disinfected and recharged with chlorine atoms as often as needed. - The company says the product costs less than a single curtain laundering cycle. - UMF PERFECTCLEAN says it works with hospital infection prevention and EVS teams to guide implementation based on facility-specific protocols and needs. - Product information, pricing and program details are available by email at info@perfectclean.com or by phone at 888 920 0370. - UMF PERFECTCLEAN’s social media links include LinkedIn , Instagram and Facebook . Between the lines: - The launch targets a specific gap between contamination risk and the slow pace of curtain laundering in many hospitals. - The product’s value proposition is operational as much as clinical, since it is meant to fit into existing cleaning routines. - The APIC debut suggests UMF PERFECTCLEAN is positioning CPULL for infection-prevention teams that influence hospital purchasing and workflow. What’s next: - Hospital infection prevention and EVS teams can evaluate CPULL during APIC 2026. - Facilities interested in implementation can contact UMF PERFECTCLEAN for pricing and program details. - Wider adoption will likely depend on how hospitals weigh contamination reduction against current curtain-cleaning practices. The bottom line: - UMF PERFECTCLEAN is betting that a low-cost curtain pull device can cut a common contamination pathway in hospitals without disrupting daily operations.

Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.

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