I once worked in a hospital in nursing. I always knew of departments like this and wondered how their area was run. I certainly appreciated those who were the hidden but critical back bone of every thing us nurses needed.
@@cosplaycierra151 I do the truck driving 5 to load it from the hospital and sometimes I help tear open the bags and put them down the chutes to me it doesn't smell that bad
I repair certain industrial laundry machines. Those looked like the Milnor tunnel washers & machines there . They're beast. I'm currently trying to help salvage a small business that's been around 100 years, older then the local hospital. All operated by people not many machines and its 120 degrees all day long .
I did not expect to have my mind blown with “hospital laundry,”. I thought meh I suppose I’ll watch it and then Blam - WTF? So many complex machines!! So automated!!! Wow. Just wow. Not what I was expecting.
My aunt worked in a place like this back in the 70’s for years before it was automated and she would find all kinds of things left in doctors pockets. She also broke just about every finger on her hands pulling sheets and other laundry out of the washers and dryers. She never had them set correctly and was in pain the rest of her life.
Funny story: I was in a local laundromat several years ago. It was typical: sort of clean when the right person was on duty. I chatted with the lady while she folded. She was folding gowns etc because the place serviced our local VA hospital.
I used to work at a tuxedo rental place, we're headed to all the sorting and all this shit by hand this is like a minor miracle. I did always like finding stuff in the pockets left by renters though.
In the late 1980's and early 1990's, whilst at university (Bristol, UK), I worked in a hospital laundry during the holiday's. We sorted the laundry prior to washing. This was a psychiatric hospital and older people's hospital, so a lot of the bed linin and clothing was soiled. Laundry was just tipped on the floor and we sorted it - no conveyor belt. Dirty, boring back breaking work, but the money was good. We had a small bonus for working with the soiled laundry and would also get a bonus if we processed more items than the weekly base number.
@@ericpham4011 I mean while I understand what you mean. Living your life can be done, it may not always go the way we want or be easy. But it is possible to live a good life.
I HATE doing laundry so I can’t imagine doing laundry for a living. Other people’s laundry too, not even my own. Nope. That sounds like a nightmare job to me. No way.
I'd rather be doing manual labor because I'm better at that. Its not just what's easy for some people, its what's stimulating. Some people, myself included, go absolutely nuts at any monotonous job. These jobs are great for people who may have physical disabilities though, but there should be a way for mental stimulation around the job too, otherwise I can see a lot of people going crazy doing the same thing over and over and over and over and over...
And I thought they were clean an new sheets but I realize they’re the same sheets that we and other patients have slept on or been on and they circle back to the same places and same sheets 😯
I just got a job at one of the industrial laundry services. I'm sorting the dirty laundry and either throwing it up a chute (can only do that with the restaurant items) or load the medical on a conveyor belt by hand. We wear face masks and we switch our gloves, smocks and aprons after we're done with the biohazrd medical bags. We also sanitize our work station and the conveyor belt afterwards. The soiled blankets, sheets, tablecloths, and semi heavy soiled washcloths can get really heavy. We're on our feet all day and the hours are difficult (3 am start time) and the restaurant linen can get incredibly gross. The job is definitely not for everyone. Each site does things differently. So this is not always the way its done.
As someone who cleaned hospital rooms for almost a year, cleaning rags, mops, and other cleaning items are cleaned in the hospital in their laundry. Everything else is loading into large plastic carts in the soiled room, a Janitor goes by every so often to trade the full bins out and take the full ones down to Janitorial to wait for the truck. HOWEVER at the one I worked at, the hallway that lead to where the truck is, shared the hallway with food and nutrition, so the cooks were tracking any gross stuff dropped on its way to the trucks or the trash compactor. Also every few years they redo the designs on their items and give the old ones away before they are tossed. I took a truck load of blankets and baby items to a women's shelter when I could.
I had a coworker who used to do industrial hospital laundry. He said by the time the chemicals are done, the only things left (aside from the laundry) are corn and teeth. No clue if it’s true or not, but it sounds pretty plausible.
yes and no, i currently work there and there are still a lot of linen that comes through stained. it gets separated out and dyed pink and shipped to ambulance companies.
Look at how filthy the washing drum is, disgusting place. Doesn't look like it was cleaned properly at all. And they don't even steam sterilize the items or pass them through a press, it's all crumbled up and shitty going back. Tragic.
Laundry doesn't need to be "sterile" like surgical tools or surgical linens. They even said in this video surgical clothes are different and disposable. I don't handle my own laundry with gloves once they're clean out of worry I'd dirty them... It's not the food industry.
standing at a folding machine for 10 or 12 hours a day make your feet and back hurt so bad. standing on 6000 psi industrial concrete for 12 hours sucks. he is one tough dude. this kind of work sucks bad.
There are very powerful machines and people are also doing very good work. Hello my name is jack. I live in Dubai and here I do laundry work, my job is and I am trying to go to another country and do laundry work so that I can gain experience. If your company or any of you can help me please, I need a job. I want to come.
I work for one of these factories. the one I work for is ALOT different but a lot of similar machines, also made by the same company that made those machines.
it's not just hospitals, hospice (the elderly centers) send it as well. they use large trucks and make multiple stops per day in a 60-100 mile radius. some hospitals are so large they require THOUSANDS of pieces/pounds per day as well.
Whenever I am in the hospital I wonder if I am wearing a gown or sleeping on sheets someone died in or on. What disease did the previous person have, or did they shit and piss the bed? Just something to think about.
I am in charge of a shift at one of these laundries and let me tell you the way this laundry handles this is way different then what we do. First we sort the linen when its still dirty at my place. Second. We keep all the color and white linen separate to keep whites white and colors color. Third. We fold everything nothing gets bagged up and just send back. Fourth we iron press sheets, pillow cases and scrubs. And last we make sure we dont send back any linen with stains. So anything that looks like it wasn’t washed correctly goes into a re wash pile and let me tell you about 25 percent of the hospitals linen is sent back for re wash. Also the heavy soil ( shit and blood) is washed at least twice and most of the time the linen looks like normal linen after the wash cycles. So the next time your at a hospital you could very well be using a patient gown that was once full of blood or feces from the person before.
Yup. I work for one of the major machine companies within the laundry industry, and I have to agree with you. The way they do this... is kinda weird, I feel like. I've yet to see a laundry bag linen like that (except for mops, but that's a whole different story). I feel like they could've found a newer/better laundry to show off, as this one seems like it's quite out-of-date.
Any tips on how to get rid of blood stains at home? You know, lady's recyclable cloth pads. Bleach hasn't worked, nor has vinegar and sodium bicarbonate.
@@practicalpen1990 We use industrial grade chlorine. And peroxide to get the blood stains out. The chlorine is very strong though. I’m talking about so strong it will burn your skin. A lot of the time if the blood is very soaked into the linens the stain will not come out and we just throw it away and replace with new linen instead.
I use to work as the driver for a business like this. Ive found a phone before. There was once a syringe found. The company fined the hospital it came from. I assume non of that money went to the person who found it or was exposed to it.
I am in the soiled section of a job like this. I sort the restaurant items and medical items. In the medical items I found a pair of socks, a large really nice blanket and in the restaurant items I found several gift cards (haven't checked them) and was told some of the birthday cards can have money in them. 😊 it's as dirty as you might think. It's VERY common to find molded wash cloths and even molded dinner rolls. 🤢
I've spent a lot of time in several hospitals over the years and have never seen anything super soiled or damaged. Maybe a small spot or two. It leads me to believe that those items are throughly cleaned or tossed out.
No, First treatment in the building Is industial water when Is accettabile to discharge in the sewer it is discharged in It and then reaches the WWTP, It Is delivered to the Ocean clean like was taken from a well
Not a very modern laundry. Automatic sorting is now available. Check out the Inwatec TH-cam account. They have the most innovative solutions for automated industrial laundries.
I spend a lot of time in the hospital unfortunately and think about this/try not to think about this a lot... Unless every single one of those wash cycles is with hydrochloric acid or some shit there is no way that stuff will ever be clean. 🤣 This is the best horror film I've seen in a long time.
I once worked in a hospital in nursing. I always knew of departments like this and wondered how their area was run. I certainly appreciated those who were the hidden but critical back bone of every thing us nurses needed.
Good robots
I bet that initial unloading area just smells lovely
Hi there Greek boy
Παιζει πολυ αυτο
Actually doesn't smell that bad
I work for linen processing and we have to do it by hand rather than a machine. It does not smell good lol.
@@cosplaycierra151 I do the truck driving 5 to load it from the hospital and sometimes I help tear open the bags and put them down the chutes to me it doesn't smell that bad
As a nurse I was always curious how they cleaned it especially with how filthy some of the laundry is that we send down to them
Ikr, blood, poop, pee, dead skin, vomit. I thought the hospital did their own but guess they send it out
shit, urine, vomit, pus, and blood nightmare
I work in hospital laundry. I do laundry for the Veterans hospitals in my state and it’s hard work. But we get paid good money
This is probably the only episode where I was actually impressed by, very nice mechanical stuff
I repair certain industrial laundry machines. Those looked like the Milnor tunnel washers & machines there . They're beast.
I'm currently trying to help salvage a small business that's been around 100 years, older then the local hospital. All operated by people not many machines and its 120 degrees all day long .
This is awesome! When I was in hospital I worried that my wrinkled gown might not be totally fresh, but now I know it was likely just vacuum-sealed.
I did not expect to have my mind blown with “hospital laundry,”. I thought meh I suppose I’ll watch it and then Blam - WTF? So many complex machines!! So automated!!! Wow. Just wow. Not what I was expecting.
I actually work for linen processing and it is an interesting job.
I just started at a linen laundry job and it can be intense work. You can definitely build muscle 😅
Very interesting. They must use some serious detergent.
They use tide and hot water for rinse and wash.
@@LuciferMorningstar666-e1s That’s what I have at home
😅🤣🤣🤣
Nope most organic stains come out with household stuff .
@@jenessasaeger1182 not bacteria though.
My aunt worked in a place like this back in the 70’s for years before it was automated and she would find all kinds of things left in doctors pockets. She also broke just about every finger on her hands pulling sheets and other laundry out of the washers and dryers. She never had them set correctly and was in pain the rest of her life.
“Enters a hydraulic press to squeeze out excess water”
Me: “ooo, a pancake”
Funny story: I was in a local laundromat several years ago. It was typical: sort of clean when the right person was on duty. I chatted with the lady while she folded. She was folding gowns etc because the place serviced our local VA hospital.
Me too
@@rachmae4180 VA = Veterans' Administration not Virginia
I used to work at a tuxedo rental place, we're headed to all the sorting and all this shit by hand this is like a minor miracle. I did always like finding stuff in the pockets left by renters though.
Shouldn't this be *How Its Done*
S&A Line Railfan Yes
Yay that probably would of been more correct
this is a really good facility. unlike my hospital that uses some second rate vendor. Even the “clean” linens are dirty.
In the late 1980's and early 1990's, whilst at university (Bristol, UK), I worked in a hospital laundry during the holiday's. We sorted the laundry prior to washing. This was a psychiatric hospital and older people's hospital, so a lot of the bed linin and clothing was soiled. Laundry was just tipped on the floor and we sorted it - no conveyor belt. Dirty, boring back breaking work, but the money was good. We had a small bonus for working with the soiled laundry and would also get a bonus if we processed more items than the weekly base number.
0:46 Even the scale knows how gross the package is...
So how do I go about getting one of these folding machines? Lol
They forgot to show the meth lab underneath...
Imagine the things that you've wearing is used by dead person
I was thinking the same thing. I work at a hospital and am currently wrapped in a warm blanket because I'm so cold
Family runs a thrift store. Its more common than you think...
Do you think we are alive? While being controlled by paycheck, money, mortgage or the MP and the CO or the parking police we are 99.9 percent dead
@@ericpham4011 Chill
@@ericpham4011 I mean while I understand what you mean. Living your life can be done, it may not always go the way we want or be easy. But it is possible to live a good life.
I HATE doing laundry so I can’t imagine doing laundry for a living. Other people’s laundry too, not even my own. Nope. That sounds like a nightmare job to me. No way.
standing at a folding machine for 12 hours a day make your feet and back hurt so bad. standing on 6000 psi industrial concrete for 12 hours sucks.
Its so easy tho. Would u rather frame a house or do roofing in summer or put clothes in a machine that does most of the work for u
@@nonamenolast4648 I would choose the second option
Wimp
I'd rather be doing manual labor because I'm better at that. Its not just what's easy for some people, its what's stimulating. Some people, myself included, go absolutely nuts at any monotonous job. These jobs are great for people who may have physical disabilities though, but there should be a way for mental stimulation around the job too, otherwise I can see a lot of people going crazy doing the same thing over and over and over and over and over...
I've been watching a lot of Grey's Anatomy so this is interesting lol
2:30 idk why but the cake of laundry is just so funny to me
This should be on its own TV series called “How It’s Done “. Nothing was made here. I would watch the crap out of that series though…
Awesome!... I always wondered how this was done
I’ve been watching Science Channel for a while now! I enjoy their content! As such, I made my own sci-fi/futurist channel!!
Thank you for the subtitles
And I thought they were clean an new sheets but I realize they’re the same sheets that we and other patients have slept on or been on and they circle back to the same places and same sheets 😯
Wow i have always wanted to know about this.... i thought they just recycled and made new ones.....
Blimey this laundry has had more adventures that I've had 😂😂
So they actually use a machine... to fold laundry...
Where can I order this?
I just got a job at one of the industrial laundry services. I'm sorting the dirty laundry and either throwing it up a chute (can only do that with the restaurant items) or load the medical on a conveyor belt by hand. We wear face masks and we switch our gloves, smocks and aprons after we're done with the biohazrd medical bags. We also sanitize our work station and the conveyor belt afterwards. The soiled blankets, sheets, tablecloths, and semi heavy soiled washcloths can get really heavy. We're on our feet all day and the hours are difficult (3 am start time) and the restaurant linen can get incredibly gross. The job is definitely not for everyone. Each site does things differently. So this is not always the way its done.
As someone who cleaned hospital rooms for almost a year, cleaning rags, mops, and other cleaning items are cleaned in the hospital in their laundry. Everything else is loading into large plastic carts in the soiled room, a Janitor goes by every so often to trade the full bins out and take the full ones down to Janitorial to wait for the truck. HOWEVER at the one I worked at, the hallway that lead to where the truck is, shared the hallway with food and nutrition, so the cooks were tracking any gross stuff dropped on its way to the trucks or the trash compactor. Also every few years they redo the designs on their items and give the old ones away before they are tossed. I took a truck load of blankets and baby items to a women's shelter when I could.
I had a coworker who used to do industrial hospital laundry. He said by the time the chemicals are done, the only things left (aside from the laundry) are corn and teeth.
No clue if it’s true or not, but it sounds pretty plausible.
yes and no, i currently work there and there are still a lot of linen that comes through stained. it gets separated out and dyed pink and shipped to ambulance companies.
Are those conveyors actually clean?
Why don’t they wear gloves when touching the items after they’ve been washed?
Of course
exactly all this disqusting
Look at how filthy the washing drum is, disgusting place. Doesn't look like it was cleaned properly at all. And they don't even steam sterilize the items or pass them through a press, it's all crumbled up and shitty going back. Tragic.
@@FrozenHaxor have you ever looked at your own washing machine, is it sparkling clean? no the process in itself is dirty.. perspective
I always wondered about that. Love this show.
Touching the clean towels without gloves...3:05 and 4:35
So?
Laundry doesn't need to be "sterile" like surgical tools or surgical linens. They even said in this video surgical clothes are different and disposable. I don't handle my own laundry with gloves once they're clean out of worry I'd dirty them... It's not the food industry.
Watching giant washing machines going round and round.
Oh yeah, that's the good stuff
That voice sounds so familiar! ❤ "How It's Made?"
His name is Brooks Moore, he's provided American narration for most of the episodes
This episode is: HOW IT'S DONE
Great channel content, keep it up science channel!
0:46 Yep thats a 220.5 on the gross scale. Real gross.
Lol I was about to comment, but I had to check first
I wish I had a facility like that just for me!
My step dad works at a place like this
standing at a folding machine for 10 or 12 hours a day make your feet and back hurt so bad. standing on 6000 psi industrial concrete for 12 hours sucks. he is one tough dude. this kind of work sucks bad.
3:00 he's not wearing gloves!
There are very powerful machines and people are also doing very good work. Hello my name is jack. I live in Dubai and here I do laundry work, my job is and I am trying to go to another country and do laundry work so that I can gain experience. If your company or any of you can help me please, I need a job. I want to come.
I work for one of these factories. the one I work for is ALOT different but a lot of similar machines, also made by the same company that made those machines.
@2:07 straight up poop lol
3:03 one guy not wearing gloves...
There must a lot of hospitals near that industrial laundry mat
it's not just hospitals, hospice (the elderly centers) send it as well. they use large trucks and make multiple stops per day in a 60-100 mile radius. some hospitals are so large they require THOUSANDS of pieces/pounds per day as well.
Still i see only heavily urbanized areas can really support laundry cleaning on that scale....
Thank you
3:56 yep
Can I get one of those folding machines for my sheets please?!
0:46 even the scale knows it’s gross.
I'd love to know how many gallons of water they go through in a day.
Many, i hope that the rain water or the sinks Is used for the toilets
These are always fun to watch....
😋👌
The Mangler ..
Whenever I am in the hospital I wonder if I am wearing a gown or sleeping on sheets someone died in or on. What disease did the previous person have, or did they shit and piss the bed? Just something to think about.
How to i get one of these machines for my house?
Very cool.
I am in charge of a shift at one of these laundries and let me tell you the way this laundry handles this is way different then what we do.
First we sort the linen when its still dirty at my place.
Second. We keep all the color and white linen separate to keep whites white and colors color.
Third. We fold everything nothing gets bagged up and just send back.
Fourth we iron press sheets, pillow cases and scrubs.
And last we make sure we dont send back any linen with stains. So anything that looks like it wasn’t washed correctly goes into a re wash pile and let me tell you about 25 percent of the hospitals linen is sent back for re wash.
Also the heavy soil ( shit and blood) is washed at least twice and most of the time the linen looks like normal linen after the wash cycles. So the next time your at a hospital you could very well be using a patient gown that was once full of blood or feces from the person before.
Yup. I work for one of the major machine companies within the laundry industry, and I have to agree with you. The way they do this... is kinda weird, I feel like.
I've yet to see a laundry bag linen like that (except for mops, but that's a whole different story).
I feel like they could've found a newer/better laundry to show off, as this one seems like it's quite out-of-date.
Any tips on how to get rid of blood stains at home? You know, lady's recyclable cloth pads. Bleach hasn't worked, nor has vinegar and sodium bicarbonate.
@@practicalpen1990 High temperature and oxidating detergent
@@practicalpen1990 We use industrial grade chlorine. And peroxide to get the blood stains out. The chlorine is very strong though. I’m talking about so strong it will burn your skin. A lot of the time if the blood is very soaked into the linens the stain will not come out and we just throw it away and replace with new linen instead.
Stream Full tunnel ?
3:58 i think i have a crush on this girl folding clothes
so fine
imagine if someone left a sharp object or their phone in a laundry bag
Imagine being on the soil sort! 🤮🤮🤮
I use to work as the driver for a business like this. Ive found a phone before. There was once a syringe found. The company fined the hospital it came from. I assume non of that money went to the person who found it or was exposed to it.
Lmao i once found an apple phone that went through both the industrial washer and dryer. yea. take a guess.
I am in the soiled section of a job like this. I sort the restaurant items and medical items. In the medical items I found a pair of socks, a large really nice blanket and in the restaurant items I found several gift cards (haven't checked them) and was told some of the birthday cards can have money in them. 😊 it's as dirty as you might think. It's VERY common to find molded wash cloths and even molded dinner rolls. 🤢
Mattress makers before laws bought up old hospital
Landry to stuff mattress with this is why they have the do not remove under penelty of law tags now
Ok this was cool
So there is no question of returning the clean stuff to the particular hospital it came from?
For a 1000th of a split of a second there I thought some Beverly hills hospital was handing out Louis Vuitton garments to the nurses
I never knew.
No wonder the threading on my lab coats always come loose!
Pushed that like button once I saw the clothes cake lol 😂
I wish could we could buy miniature versions of those folding machines lol
First view from South Africa
I would love to get my hands on a used folding machine ;-)
That brunette chic folding blankets was hot!!! Cool video too
8 hope the laundry worker have health insurance because they need alot of health care
I used to work for a place that did they, they'll pay for you to get a hep b vaccine
Isn't there a rinse cycle on the machine?
The machine has 16 compartments, 5 of them are dedicated to rinsing.
I would be wearing a bio suit when unloading the dirty laundry. I would just incinerate everything.
Even the weighing machine said gross
0:45 Its a "how *gross* it is" measuring machine
Lol
(it literally says *gross*)
Haha! gross can mean total or overall too.
All these years washing my white separately
If blood and iodine both stain brown, then why not make hospital gowns brown?
Weird that workers use their bare hands to sort and fold clean laundry....thereby making it not clean anymore.
WRINKLES!
Please make a video of How a dead person was made alive
Without masks.
That chick folding was hot
Laundry cakes lol
4:22 im sorry, NEATLY folded???
3:57
I feel like I need to bring my own type of hospital things because this is gross
no need for that... all the hospital laundry is being disinfected during wash process
Yeah. Can you really remove crap from a hospital gown....
@@boowiebear yes, they can
I've spent a lot of time in several hospitals over the years and have never seen anything super soiled or damaged. Maybe a small spot or two. It leads me to believe that those items are throughly cleaned or tossed out.
What happens to that contaminated water? Straight to our oceans-fish-bodies?
No, First treatment in the building Is industial water when Is accettabile to discharge in the sewer it is discharged in It and then reaches the WWTP, It Is delivered to the Ocean clean like was taken from a well
Not a very modern laundry. Automatic sorting is now available. Check out the Inwatec TH-cam account. They have the most innovative solutions for automated industrial laundries.
So what actually “made” in there? 😅
Clean clothes.
3:04 Why is the man in the right side of the screen not wearing gloves while the person on the left is?
Only the non-colored are allowed gloves.
Okay, but where do they make the meth?
As a black transgender asexual nurse, I appreciate everything you guys do.
mmm hospital clothing cake
I spend a lot of time in the hospital unfortunately and think about this/try not to think about this a lot... Unless every single one of those wash cycles is with hydrochloric acid or some shit there is no way that stuff will ever be clean. 🤣 This is the best horror film I've seen in a long time.
0:45 220.5 Gross yup totally gross 🤢