Dr Lomp The Cleaning

The short answer is yes—if you are in healthcare, food prep, or hospitality.

The cost of a hospital-acquired infection (HAI) is approximately $30,000 per patient. The cost of implementing the Dr. Lomp The Cleaning protocol is a few cents in additional disinfectant and training time.

You cannot guess with germs. Dr. Lomp The Cleaning is not just a service; it is a discipline. It treats cleaning as a pharmaceutical dose: the right chemical, for the right time, on the right surface. dr lomp the cleaning

Whether you are a hospital administrator looking to lower infection rates, a dental hygienist protecting your staff, or a homeowner dealing with a mold allergy, adopt the Dr. Lomp mindset. Stop cleaning for appearance. Start cleaning for biology.

Remember: If it isn't measured, timed, and validated, it isn't "Dr. Lomp clean." It is just dust redistribution. The short answer is yes—if you are in


Keywords integrated: Dr Lomp the cleaning, medical-grade disinfection, biofilm removal, infection control protocols, hospital cleaning standards, ATP testing.


Dr. Lomp’s process is famously obsessive. He categorizes dirt into 17 types, uses 12 different brushes for a single sink, and cleans in “layers” — physical, emotional, and symbolic. “When I remove grime, I’m also removing guilt,” he says. and cleans in “layers” — physical

One client, a divorced father of two, tearfully described watching Dr. Lomp scrub a decade’s worth of coffee stains from a kitchen corner. “He didn’t judge me. He just… cleaned. And by the end, I felt like I could breathe again.”

The phrase "Dr. Lomp" often refers to a specific certification or branded methodology (sometimes associated with European medical cleaning standards, particularly in German-speaking nations where "Lomp" is a surname in hygiene technology). However, in the broader vernacular, Dr. Lomp The Cleaning represents the intersection of doctoral-level attention to detail and industrial cleaning power.

Unlike standard janitorial services, Dr. Lomp’s approach treats every surface as a potential vector for pathogens. It moves beyond aesthetics into disinfection, infection control, and biofilm removal.

The average cleaner sprays a surface and wipes it dry immediately. Dr. Lomp The Cleaning requires "wet time." A disinfectant needs 3 to 10 minutes of visible wetness to kill spores and viruses. If you wipe it dry in 10 seconds, you have wasted the product.