Home » Health » Title: Low-Cost Sanitary Equipment: Risks & The Rise of Public Rental

Title: Low-Cost Sanitary Equipment: Risks & The Rise of Public Rental

by Dr. Michael Lee – Health Editor

Substandard Sanitary equipment Poses Health Risks, Driving Shift⁢ to ‘Rental Conversion’ in Public Facilities

SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA – ⁢Schools, hospitals, and welfare facilities across the nation are increasingly vulnerable to health and safety risks due ⁢to aging⁤ or low-quality sanitary equipment, prompting⁣ a move towards ​extensive ⁢rental services‌ as a facility management innovation. The shift aims ⁢to address⁣ concerns over ⁤pollution, viral spread, and general safety threats exacerbated by deferred maintenance and budget constraints.

Traditionally, public institutions have relied on low-price bidding for sanitary equipment ​procurement, frequently ‌enough resulting in substandard products⁣ prone‍ to breakdowns and requiring frequent, costly repairs. This approach is now being challenged by a growing ⁤emphasis on quality, transparency, ‌and proactive ‍maintenance. Negotiated contracts,prioritizing quality over solely price,are gaining‍ traction,alongside a ‌”rental conversion” model offered by public rental services.

This new⁢ model includes​ immediate equipment replacement upon failure, regular inspections, ‌filter and consumable replacements, and automated maintenance schedules – collectively reducing the maintenance workload​ by 50-70%, according to service providers. Beyond operational efficiency, the rental model offers meaningful ESG benefits. It supports mandatory purchase performance for standard workplaces⁤ for the disabled, reducing the employment burden for ⁤organizations and creating stable ⁢jobs within vulnerable communities. Sanitary equipment rental is being positioned as a⁢ “social value creation infrastructure.”

“Sanitary equipment is not just a facility, ⁣it is also about safety and ⁣health,” stated a public rental official. “Combining the ⁢highest quality equipment, obvious​ contracts, free management, and ‌ESG effects, ‍we want to ‌create a ‘new facility management standard.'”

The move ‌comes as facilities grapple with the direct health risks associated with malfunctioning ‌or poorly maintained​ sanitary systems. Leaving ‌broken equipment unattended is no longer viewed ⁣as simply a budgetary issue, but as a potential catalyst for illness and infection.

more information is available on ⁤the public rental⁣ official ⁢website: https://xn--ob0ba136fx1y.com/index.do

!Image ⁢of⁤ sanitary equipment

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