Views: 0 Author: Site Editor Publish Time: 2025-11-29 Origin: Site
Influenza is by no means a common cold. It is a highly contagious respiratory disease with a fast transmission rate. While a common cold mainly affects the nose and throat, influenza launches a severe attack on the "entire body system."
Typical flu symptoms include: sudden high fever (temperature often above 38.5℃), headache, generalized muscle aches, significant fatigue, cough, sore throat, etc. For high-risk groups such as infants, the elderly, pregnant women, and patients with chronic underlying diseases, influenza may cause severe complications such as pneumonia, myocarditis, and encephalitis, and even be life-threatening.

Diverse transmission routes: Primarily spreads through respiratory droplets, and can also be indirectly transmitted through contact with contaminated hands or daily utensils.
High contagiousness: Easily spreads rapidly among crowds, leading to clustered outbreaks. Crowded places such as schools, nursing homes, and offices are often "high-risk areas."
Asymptomatic transmission: Approximately 30% of infected individuals show no obvious symptoms but are still contagious.
Vaccination: Annual flu vaccination is the most effective way to prevent influenza, with a protection rate of 60%-70%. Even if you have experienced flu-like symptoms that resolved on their own without confirmation, vaccination is still recommended.
Daily protection: Wash hands frequently; wear masks in public places during peak flu season; follow cough etiquette; avoid touching eyes, nose, and mouth with hands.
Isolation as much as possible: The patient should preferably stay in a separate room. If conditions do not allow, maintain a distance of at least 1 meter from other family members.
Wear masks: The patient should wear a mask when going out or moving in public spaces; caregivers should also wear masks when entering the patient’s room.
Frequent ventilation and disinfection: Open windows for ventilation 2-3 times a day, each time for no less than 30 minutes. Wipe frequently touched surfaces such as tabletops and door handles with chlorine-containing disinfectant or 75% alcohol daily.
During the high flu season, in addition to personal protection and home cleaning, choosing an efficient air disinfection and purification device can add an extra layer of health protection for the whole family.

Kangbeijing’s DBD Plasma Air Disinfection and Purification Machine integrates traditional air filtration with plasma technology. Clinically verified for human-machine coexistence, it possesses comprehensive air purification capabilities, including high-efficiency sterilization, odor removal, and allergen purification.
Strong virus inactivation and disinfection efficiency: Derived from the air circulation system of spacecraft cabins, the flowing plasma technology penetrates every corner of the room, achieving seamless purification and disinfection.
IoT intelligent empowerment: Multi-effect composite sensors enable real-time monitoring of air quality through multiple channels, intelligently adjusting purification modes based on indoor air conditions.
Human-machine coexistence and real-time purification: While disinfecting, it precisely releases tens of millions of negative ion clusters, restoring a forest-like fresh air environment with zero ozone risk.
Safety, environmental protection, and low energy consumption/cost operation: Features a precision instrument-style maintenance plan that only requires regular cleaning. It saves 40% of annual maintenance costs compared to traditional filter-based air treatment solutions.