Posts
- Are we prepared?
- Cancer treatment and chemical hazards
- Carcinogens: Different classifications
- CE Marking and classification of medical devices
- Chemical risk at home: Hydro soluble unit-dose laundry pods
- Chemical risk in ?
- Chemical risk in civil construction industries and cement production
- Chemical risk in food industry
- Chemical risk in industrial subcontracting for the maintenance
- Chemical risk in metallurgy?
- Chemical risk in paper industry?
- Chemical risk in plastic and rubber industry
- Chemical risk in solar energy ?
- Chemical risk in wastewater treatment?
- Chemical risks in automotive industry
- Chemical risks in chemical waste treatment
- Chemical risks in detergents production
- Chemical risks in emergency departments
- Chemical risks in mining industry?
- Chemical risks in petrochemical industry
- Chemical risks in pharmaceutical industry
- Chemical risks in semiconductors industry?
- Crotonaldehyde - Focus on specific chemicals of interest
- Endocrine disruptors
- European Standard EN 15154 - Safety showers
- Exposure to chemical risks in the meat industry
- Katie Piper - Victim of a chemical aggression
- Laboratory - Avoid tissue injuries
- Laboratory - Control chemical exposures
- Laboratory - Fire prevention
- Laboratory - Storage of chemicals
- Lime : Chemical risk and Prevention
- Lithium-ion batteries: why and when do they pose a risk of chemical exposure for people?
- Nitric acid, a danger lurking
- Occupational doctor: What to do on learning through an employee or the director that new chemical products are being used?
- Occupational Health Nurse (OHN) and chemicals
- Organization of SAMU in Brazil
- Personal nurse experience in safety data sheet’s decryption
- Picric acid: Understanding specific chemicals hazard
- Pictographs in the workplace
- Recent developments in nanotoxicology
- Sugar industry: chemical exposure in sugar production
- The danger of hydrofluoric acid (HF)
- The Occupational Health Nurse and risk assessment
- The secrets of solvation
- Thioglycolic acid :Understanding the risk of specific chemicals of interest
- Training of occupational health professionals
- Vinyl acetate: Understanding the risk of specific chemicals of interest
- Why speak about “chemical injury” rather than “chemical burn” ?
Pages
- "Anticipate and Save" series
- Episode 1: Repackaging
- Episode 10: Slippery floors
- Episode 2: The Lunch Break
- Episode 3: Aeration and extraction
- Episode 4: Sampling
- Episode 5: Personal protective equipment
- Episode 6: Self-propelled handling trucks
- Episode 7: MDS
- Episode 8: Maintenance work on the production line
- Episode 9: Working at height
- Benefits of DIPHOTERINE®
- Available everywhere
- Immediate use in all circumstances
- Increases time for response
- Quick response
- Reduces maintenance and installation costs
- Reduces severity
- Relieves pain
- Removes the risk of hypothermia
- Simplifies the emergency
- Books on prevention, regulations and management of chemical risk and burns
- Chemical Hazard and Human Health
- Chemical lesions
- Chemical Ocular Burns
- Chemical risk, from physico chemical to toxicology
- Chemical Skin Injury
- Compliance certificate
- Contact
- Contact online training
- DIPHOTERINE® solution
- Downloads
- HF burns
- Home
- How to understand the new labelling of chemicals GHS and CLP
- Humanitarian Project
- List of tested chemicals
- NaCl
- Online training
- Order form
- Our training videos
- About Prevor
- Eye wash solutions
- How to open DIPHOTERINE® products?
- Hypertonic eyewash solution
- Safety showers and their alternatives
- The best ways to deal with chemical risks
- The burn with hydrofluoric acid
- The chemical lesion
- The chemical risk in hospitals
- The chemical risk in the paper industry
- The chemical risk in the sugar industry
- The chemical risk in water treatment plants
- The DIPHOTERINE® solution
- The HEXAFLUORINE® solution
- The risk of a chemical projection in the dairy industry
- The risk of chemical projection in the petrochemical industry
- The risk of chemical splashes in the energy sector
- The risk of chemical splashes in the manufacture of soft drinks
- The risk of chemical spraying in the surface treatment sector
- What are the differences between a thermal burn and a chemical burn?
- Pro Space
- Rinsing instructions of chemical burns with DIPHOTERINE® and HEXAFLUORINE® solutions
- Scientific publications, studies and articles on DIPHOTERINE® solution
- Scientific publications, studies and articles on HEXAFLUORINE® solution
- Summary of the Chemical Burn
- The HEXAFLUORINE® solution
- The portal of chemical risk
- Usage information – NaCl
- Webinars
- What is a thermal burn? How are they classified?
- Who is PREVOR?
- Worsening factors of the chemical burn
Products
- AFTERWASH II®eyewash
- DIPHOTERINE® All-in-one case
- DIPHOTERINE® DAP autonomous shower
- DIPHOTERINE® LPM eyewash
- DIPHOTERINE® MICRO aerosol
- DIPHOTERINE® MINI aerosol
- DIPHOTERINE® SIEW eyewash
- DIPHOTERINE® Wall-mounted station
- Hexafluorine® All-in-one case
- Hexafluorine® Autonomous Portable Shower
- Hexafluorine® Wall-mounted station
- The Water-Jel® compress
Testimonies
- Interview with Annie Valorteaux (nurse at Creuzet Aéronautique): ‘Diphoterine® is more practical than water from a visibility point of view’
- Interview with Carlos Arellanos, Occupational health physician in Mexico: ‘Thanks to Diphoterine® solution, there were no sequela’
- Interview with Damien Poirot (Beurrière d'Isigny): ‘Diphoterine® is definitely quicker than water!’
- Interview with Hélène Duval, nurse at Smurfit (paper mill): ‘Those who are most exposed have Diphoterine® solution on their belts’
- Interview with Jean-Luc Fortin, A&E physician: ‘Chemical burns represent 10% of burns’
- Interview with Lucie Montignies, Safety Communication Officer at l'Oréal: ‘Diphoterine® is practical and easy to use’
- Interview with Lucien Bodson, Anesthesiologist in Belgium: ‘We must specify chemical burns because these burns are of another type’
- Interview with Mickaël Dupont: ‘Diphoterine® solution is active, unlike water’
- Interview with Parag Kulkarni, A&E physician in India: ‘Diphoterine® solution helps workers’