Gyms And Health Clubs

Gyms and Health Clubs have a hygiene issue since many people are using the same equipment. If someone has an illness, that disease if contagious can be transmitted so easily to another individual through the air or through perspiration just by touching the surface of a piece of equipment. The locker rooms and pool areas are also a breeding ground for bacteria and mold because of the high traffic, wet towels and damp floors.


With all that bacteria and perspiration, odors are inevitable and are a challenge in even the cleanest gym or health club.

Pools in these facilities use Chlorine to disinfect the water. Chlorine is a very good disinfectant but is also very toxic. Many people who like to swim in a lake or the ocean will not go into a public pool because of the chlorine and the negative effect it has on the skin. They would however jump at the chance to join a club whose pool is bubbled with active oxygen as this is not only non-toxic, it actually has a revitalizing effect on the skin and whole physiology.

Pro Activ Ox™ products can completely transform a gym and health club and provide a much better way to sanitize and disinfect pool water than chlorine.


"Active Oxygen can be circulated throughout a gym or health club by fitting one of our products into the Heating, Ventilating and Air Conditioning (HVAC) system of the club. Active oxygen kills bacteria and eliminates odors and so circulating these highly charged oxygen molecules will transform the atmosphere in the gym, club and locker room. This will eliminate any existing mold within a couple of days of installation and will keep the entire facility (anywhere the HVAC blows air) mold free thereafter.

By bubbling active oxygen into the pool water it will completely kill bacteria in the water and on any surfaces.

For areas of gyms and health clubs that do not have HVAC vents, then portable Pro-Activ Ox units can be plugged into specific areas".

Huron Road Hospital—Bacteriological Testing

Cleveland, OH



"After receiving from you the active oxygen air purifier for the purpose of bacteriological testing, I am pleased to report the following results.

Using the slit sampling technique, the effects of the active oxygen device on bacterial air contamination were tested. Bacterial counts as high as 1800 to 2000 were obtained while the class of the Medical Technology School was in session. Some colonies of pathogens, such a hemolytic streptococci and staphylococci, were noted among the colonies of this mixed contamination.

The active oxygen device was then put into action, and within two hours, while the room was still being used for class lectures, the colony count was reduced (approximately 96%) to the 75-100 range. It also eliminated all the undesirable odors in the post-mortem room, both during and after autopsies".

George J. Voreska M.D.

Pathologist