Our services include the following:

  1. Remove mattress as needed
  2. Remove furniture as needed
  3. Remove fabrics as needed
  4. Remove floor as needed
  5. Remove walls as needed
  1. Chemical fog as needed
  2. Ozone as needed
  3. Seal part or total room

Whichever death cleanup methods that we choose to use depends upon the type of cleaning involved. Sometimes death cleanup requires the use of special tools and special chemicals. Sometimes we get by with everyday chemicals found on supermarket shelves. The extent of blood damage and other potentially infections materials will give direction to our efforts.

We have cleaned throughout Florida. We clean night and day, any day of the week. Our death cleanup service provides professional death cleanup at a reasonable fee. We treat others as we would choose to be treated under the same or similar circumstances.

Counties

Alachua Baker Bay Bradford Brevard Broward Calhoun Charlotte Citrus Clay Collier Columbia Dade DeSoto Dixie Duval Escambia Flagler Florida Keys Franklin Gadsden Gilchrist Glades Gulf Hamilton Hardee Hendry Hernando Highlands Hillsborough Holmes Indian River Jackson Jefferson Lafayette Lake Lee Leon Levy Liberty Madison Manatee Marion Martin MiamiDade Monroe Nassau Okaloosa Okeechobee Orange Osceola Palm Beach Pasco Pinellas Polk Putnam Saint Johns Saint Lucie Santa Rosa Sarasota Seminole Singer Sumter Suwannee Tampa Taylor Treasure Coast Union Volusia Wakulla Walton Washington

Most homeowners' insurance policies in Clay will cover death cleanup costs. We are here to help with your cleaning needs.

Call if you have questions about death cleanup weather or not you intend to make an appointment.

Ask to discuss our terms if need to ensure that you receive the best possible price for our service. We accept cash, credit cards, Paypal.

Click Florida suicide cleanup companiest o find more information about Google's suicide cleanup links. And click here if you wish to find more states for suicide cleanup help. Crime scene cleanup companies are not hard to find.

Death Cleanup Explained

 Clay's medical examiners must investigate certain death scenes before death cleanup begins. Only when they complete their investigation may cleaning begin. Crime scene cleaners clean and decontaminate materials and areas soiled by homicides, suicides, and unattended deaths. Biohazards created by homicides, suicides, and decomposition following unattended deaths must be removed carefully. Trained cleaners should be used to for certain types of death cleanup.

Narrative on Trauma and Emotional Influences -

In general, violent deaths should be cleaned by professional cleaners with bloodborne pathogen training as well as documented experience. The sight of certain death scenes may cause psychological trauma for some people. It is enough to witness a violent death, cleaning a death scene created by violence may cause as much emotional discomfort. When decomposition follows a death, for certain a professional cleaner should clean the death scene.

If a professional cleaner cannot be afforded, there is a do it your self web site available that requires a small fee for consultation and web site explanation service. If the small consultation service fee is not available, call Eddie Evans at 888-431-7233 for help. If the telephone is busy, call back. If the telephone is not answered, it is because Eddie is between mountains, near a loud machine, or too contaminated by blood during a death cleanup to answer the telephone. Do call back.

An unattended death followed by decomposition demands professional attention because of its horrific nature, its unforeseen hazards, and its emotional issues. Whether a crime scene cleanup, a suicide cleanup, or death by natural causes, a decomposed body will leave an extraordinary amount of fluid, tissue, and damage.

The material left behind has its own odors and appearances. It is difficult to explain the difficulty cleaning a horrendous death scene soiled by blood. After death cleanup the odors begin to subside.

An unattended death followed by decomposition is usually quite horrifying when first seen by the unsuspecting. The odors associated with a death scene strike one as nauseating. On a crime scene, odors add to the horrific appearance as the two become associated with one another.

For a while, many people recall a death cleanup whenever a loose association is made to it. A male urinating while standing may associate the urine odor with the death scene. The acrid, acidic odors of urine resemble death cleanup odors because urine is contained in death's fluids. Entering a butcher shop will do the same, both visually and by olfaction. You will learn quickly what a death cleanup technician experiences.

Parosmia is the result, a distorted perception arising from real, airborne molecules triggering unpleasant memories. Of course death cleanup triggers many memories during cleaning.

As a psycho-somatic cue for the death scene's trauma inducing responses, the subject may easily recall the traumatic scene with a tightening of muscles and restricted vascular flow. This is in essence the fight-or-flight response of any animal when confronted by a threat, real or imagined.

It becomes obvious that children and others exposed to a death scene created by violence or decomposition may suffer emotionally later, which may be framed as Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD ). Any decomposition death scene has the potential to do the same. Emotional cues are instilled by traumatic scenes, whatever their cause.

Besides homicides, suicides, and death by natural causes, any decomposition of the human body requires special consideration, special handling. More information at orange-county-crime-scene-cleanup.com will help clarify any questions. TOP

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A death cleanup follows an event that soils areas with organisms, or material from organisms. As a biohazard, this material is a threat to human health. For our purposes, suicide, homicide, unattended death, and other soiled environments are cleaned by removing soiling material, then actually cleaning, disinfecting, and sealing. The goal is to destroy and remove microorganisms, virus, and toxins contaminating the environment with human fluids. A thorough death cleanup must follow blood and fluid loss during and after death.

Death Odors from Decomposing Suicide

Death leaves its own Odors - Miasma

"Will all Neptune's great ocean wash Clean this blood from my hand?" Macbeth

Blood does come off, and Lady Macbeth would have done well to recognize that blood need not cause anxiety when it comes to death cleanup.

A short comment about the "death odor" precedes the crime scene cleanup comments found here.

You might be interested to know that many people call the death odor "miasma." This term goes back to the 17th century when the death odor was associated with disease. Many educated people taught that miasma was itself carried plagues. We know today that miasma is just as safe as any other odor. It simply offends our sense of taste. We might ask, "Were we born with a distaste for this odor?". "Do Instincts account for our repulsed behavior to this odor?" we might also ask.

Both answers to the above questions are no and no! Just like any other odor, we must learn to dislike miasma's various fragrances. Everyday around the world tens of thousands of people work with miasma and remain healthy. In short, we learn to "hate" the odor of death more so because of what it means to us than what it does to us.

Death Odors

The odors associated with a death cleanup consist of both organic and inorganic substances. The inorganic are the materials used in the crime, such as the odor of gun powder. For our purposes here, our concern is the organic substances that lead to strong, repulsive contamination of a structure's internal environment.

Blood and other potentially infectious materials (OPIM) begin decomposing once released from the body. The rate of decomposition depends upon the external environment's temperature, relative humidity, and other conditions. Along with decomposition follows odor. Both blood and OPIM flow readily during Clay's hot weather. Death cleanup slows during the warm season.

Blood's contents include proteins, carbohydrates, oxygen, carbon dioxide, urine, feces, enzymes, oils, and more add to its mal-odor properties. The detection of blood's odor depends upon the perceivers' previous experience with this odor as well as their strength of odor detection. Among any group of people, one will have a greater ability to detect blood's presence than the others, and so on. It is a relative matter.

Violent deaths usually involve a great loss of blood and tissue, OPIM (Other Potentially Infectious Materials). The loss of blood and tissue, the environmental conditions, and other circumstances will aid in the production of offensive death scene odors.

Sometimes death's odors linger because of poor ventilation, Sometimes miasma will linger because it has permeated porous materials: fabrics, paper, wood, and more.
We do our best to remove the odors associated with crime scenes and other death scenes. However, removing the source material will not always return the scene to its pre-incident condition for some time. Time and heavy ventilation, and removal of death odors permeated materials will help return the scene to a more "normal" condition.
We can apply chemicals to help increase the death odor's departure from the scene, but even chemicals have their limits. Ask about our odor control policies and methods if this is a concern. top

Homicide

About half of our homicide cleanups take place in residential settings. Usually the female victims out number male victims by about 6 to 1, it seems. Often a handgun or kitchen knife serves as the murder weapon. Death cleanup for homicide deaths takes time and patience. We inspect all rooms, and in the homicide room we check drawers and cupboards for blood. We must check these areas in case they were open during the homicide and someone later closed them.

The type of homicide sometimes contributes to the amount of death cleanup required. Criminal homicide includes murder, voluntary manslaughter, and involuntary manslaughter. All of these offenses carry their own level of punishment.

Classifying these terms further for death cleanup purposes makes no sense. Suffice it to say, in terms of death cleanup, first degree murders cause much time, patience, and labor, especially when shotguns kill the victims. We find that voluntary manslaughter does not include large weapons and often enough these types of homicide leave less to slow cleaning. First-degree murder death cleanup usually takes much more time to.

A number of our death cleanups involved a defense of property and other people. These usually fall within the voluntary manslaughter castigatory, and as readers might suspect, occur on the spur-of-the-moment and without forethought. Death cleanups following these events usually takes place in rooms and rarely requires cleaning in adjacent areas.

Here the battered-woman syndrome applies most often. Beaten repeatedly over the years, the female perpetrator finally defends herself and family from an abusive male, usually an alcoholic or drug using husband. We apply the term crime scene cleanup to homicide cleanup for signifying the death cleanup resulted from an illegal homicide.

Suicide Cleanup

Suicide cleanup qualifies as "self-murder" and for death cleanup work, suicide cleanup claims the most emotional influence on the death cleanup technician.

Many stories in the Old Testament note that men committed suicide as a matter of honor. We imagine that death cleanup remained a non-event in many cases. In the Middle Ages men committed suicide for the same reason. Of course in these times death cleanup hardly caused concern. Blood and other infectious materials were left to dry out and decompose, or simply covered over with dirt.

Tradesmen committed suicide to escape debt and suffering. Death cleanup in these cases probably cause little concern.

The role of Christianity in suicide became most evident when Emile Durkheim published "Suicide." In this empirical approach to suicide, he showed that ideological differences, cultural differences, and religious differences all played some role in the occurrence of suicide. For example, Catholics committed suicide less often than Protestants; numbers from Italy, Spain, and South America contrasted sharply with those from Scandinavian countries as well as Ireland.

If the reader suspects that white males commit suicide more often than other demographic groups, it is true. We can only guess that loneliness, failure to achieve others' and self's expectations, tragic loss, and other life changing events must play some role in white male suicides. Death cleanup following these suicides provides many clues, none of which need be searched for.

Unattended Death Cleanup

Unattended deaths in the United States began to increase as our discretionary income increased. Put another way, surplus income allowed us to move to our own private residence, free from the annoying clamor of others. For some of us this lifestyle works nicely.

As a consequence, unattended deaths increased and with unattended death came decomposition issues. The death cleanup technician expects to find decomposition materials whenever responding to an unattended death cleanup. Most often suicides come under the unattended death cleanup category. Rarely do people commit suicide in front of others, and when they do guns and shotguns serve the most often.

Of course, in places like New York City, about 40 percent of suicides take place in front of hundreds of people as suicide victims jump from tall buildings to their deaths. Death cleanup in these instances requires 3 technicians because of foot and vehicle traffic, as well as the need for speedy death cleanups.

Eddie Evans

Crime Scene Cleanup