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SBS is challenging to diagnose since the symptoms are similar to those of a typical cold—headache, sore throat, itchy eyes, dizziness, and a runny nose.
FREMONT, CA: The Coronavirus pandemic has caused many businesses to take a hard look at their employees' and facilities' health and safety. It is both ethical and financially imperative to keep employees happy and healthy, and creating a safe workplace environment is critical to attaining both of these goals.
Fortunately, as smart technologies advance, businesses will better integrate human feedback with real-time data, accurate monitoring, and automation to avert problems like "Sick Building Syndrome" (SBS).
Sick Building Syndrome
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SBS is a condition that is brought on by being inside a building and is primarily caused by poor indoor air quality. According to the survey, poor indoor air quality, observed in around 30 percent of new and refurbished buildings.
SBS is challenging to diagnose since the symptoms are similar to those of a typical cold—headache, sore throat, itchy eyes, dizziness, and a runny nose.
The key to detecting SBS is that the condition improves when the individual leaves the building and returns when the individual returns.
- Preventing SBS
Smart IoT sensors can assist property managers in proactively monitoring and improving many aspects of workplace air quality, hence preventing SBS in the future.
It's easier for businesses to assess indoor air quality and disclose the air quality characteristics that may contribute to SBS using today's tiny, affordable sensors and integrated building management systems.
- Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs)
Organic compounds produced from products or processes are the main contributors to poor indoor air quality VOCs. Users can usually smell VOCs if they are present.
Relevant parties can effectively manage VOC hazards by removing or prohibiting access to the source of the VOCs by deploying smart sensors around the building that offer real-time data on VOC levels.
Because smart air quality monitoring is comprehensive, real-time, and localized, users can isolate SBS hazards in the building and handle problems at their source. When it comes to VOCs, smart sensors can help to pinpoint the source of the problem.
- Carbon Dioxide Levels
Symptoms such as nausea, vomiting, and dizziness can occur when carbon dioxide levels are moderate to high. To help minimize carbon dioxide in the air, wireless sensors connected to the Internet of Things are a wise investment. Smart systems can be programmed to perform automated adjustments when high amounts of carbon dioxide are detected, such as automatically changing HVAC systems, in addition to monitoring capabilities.
- Smart Technology Dose
Every building manager can afford to install smart sensors linked to a central management panel as a preventative step. As a result, today's building managers, better positioned to limit the danger of SBS because of improved, cost-effective improvements in smart building management.
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