Truth about Modern Travel
Are you distressed by the downgrading of cleanliness and
unavoidable contact with infectious bacteria and fungus?
We are!
unavoidable contact with infectious bacteria and fungus?
We are!
To protect ourselves, we've developed a product line with a simple mission: STOP BACTERIA & FUNGUS from growing on our stuff. We create products that shield themselves from bacteria and fungus left behind by others.
Germs are often passed through contact with hard surfaces- the floor, tray tables. When you travel, the following situations are true:
Germs are often passed through contact with hard surfaces- the floor, tray tables. When you travel, the following situations are true:
- TSA Lines: You and thousands of others walk with your shoes off through the TSA Lines. With ArgentPro Socks, fungus and bacteria can't live on your socks.
- Airplanes: For comfort, you'd like to have your shoes off in-flight. Take them off. No worries about those airplane floors, or even the bathroom.
- Trains: Just like planes. Stay comfortable and secure during your ride.
- Airplane Tray Tables: A National Science Foundation study discovered that the Airplane Tray Tables are 10x dirtier than the Lavatory Flush Button! Infrequently cleaned, airplane tray tables are filled with bacteria. Our Travel Mats make a clean space.
- Airplane, Train, Bus Headrests: Remember when public transportation provided covers on headrests? They're now gone. No worries. Stay protected with our Travel Mat.
- Hotel Rooms: Hotel Room carpets are a breeding ground for pathogens. ArgentPro socks keep them away from your feet.
- Footwear Rentals: Bowling and skating are fun, but using other people's shoes isn't. No worries with ArgentPro socks.
The evidence about the high level of bacteria, fungus and germs on airplanes and other public transportation keeps growing. Travelmath.com cites a National Science Foundation study about the level of cleanliness on airplanes.
It's not a pretty story, but ArgentPro is a weapon against the bacterial assault of planes.
Here's how the Huffington Post Travel introduced the article, "7 Things You Shouldn't Touch on a Plane", August 28, 2015:
Air travel is not the most sanitary experience: Super-tight seating arrangements force hordes of humans with all types of coughs, colds and questionable hygiene habits into one tiny space to share air, armrests and all the germs that come with travel.
And the results are not so pretty. Studies have found nasty germs -- from E. coli that causes severe diarrhea to MRSA bacterial that's resistant to many antibiotics -- in all sorts of places on a plane, where they can live for days at a time. That's bad news.
And the Wall Street Journals even made a video to make us concerned: