What's New
JULY 2009 - TOTAL SOLUTION TO PUPIL TOILETING REQUIREMENTS
A ‘total’ approach to personal hygiene is being introduced to help school
management understand and comply with the raft of new statutory and advisory
guidelines to accommodate pupils with special needs, and to benefit from a
share of £96m to implement them.
Total Hygiene, the UK’s leading supplier of toileting solutions for disabled,
has developed its complete washroom package to enable school architects and
management to access a simple solution to design and provide toilets that meet
the needs of most...
Under the unique scheme, a fully accessible washroom/ toilet can be designed,
supplied, installed and commissioned through one single source, from simple
grab rails through height adjustable changing tables and height adjustable
washbasins to Clos-o-Mat height adjustable automatic ‘wash and dry’ bidet toilets.
Robin Tuffley, Total Hygiene Marketing Manager, elaborates, “The new DCSF
Building Bulletin 102- designing for disabled children and children with special
educational needs- advises that accessible toilets and changing spaces for
personal care are available at convenient intervals around the school. The
Building Schools for the Future standard specification for toilets states toilet
and changing facilities need to be designed to be suitable for all pupils,
staff and visitors including those with special educational needs and disabilities.
Each toilet block should have accessible toilets to the same quality and aesthetic
as the other facilities. Further, the new BS8300:2009 Inclusive Building Design
requires public buildings to incorporate ‘Changing Places’ facilities. The
Government’s School Access Initiative is pledging £96m pa to be made available
up to and including the 2010/11 school year to improve accessibility of mainstream
schools to disabled pupils and those with special educational needs.
“Outside of the statutory issues, the ‘Bog Standard’ campaign claims 10% of
pupils have problems with continence- which isn’t necessarily classed as ‘special
needs’ At the end of the day, access to decent toilets is a basic human right.With
the best will in the world, the senior teams involved in ensuring compliance
within education establishments cannot have in-depth knowledge of the range
of options available to meet the requirements of pupils with a range of needs
in terms of their personal hygiene, and would logically seek input from those
who have that knowledge and expertise to meet the requirements, whether at
the most basic level or in providing a ‘best practice’ solution.”
King James 1 Community College is one school that has already utilized the
facility. The College has been designated as a physical resource base by the
Local Education Authority, and as a result has invested in providing a bespoke
toilet and physiotherapy room for its students with physical difficulties.
The school now incorporates a Clos-o-Mat Lima Lift toilet, plus adjustable
washbasins and changing tables all supplied by Total Hygiene. The school’s
SENCO (Special education needs co-ordinator) observes, “The students love it!”
Total Hygiene has over 40 years’ experience in the provision of toileting
solutions for disabled people. The company manufactures the top-selling Clos-o-Mat
‘wash and dry’ toilet, the only one of its kind with WRAS approval enabling
legal connection to mains water supply. Total Hygeine also provides a comprehensive
sales, installation and after sales package, and offers a range of options
to enable tailoring of each unit to individual requirements. Its technical
engineers can assess premises to establish the most appropriate requirements,
ranging from simple support rails to a Lima Lift.
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