10 October,2009 07:43 AM IST | | Agencies
For the executive who doesn't have time to come down with the flu, a Japanese company has invented a new form of protection the anti-H1N1 suit.
Menswear company Haruyama Trading claims the suit can protect wearers from the H1N1 virus, also known as swine flu, as it is coated with titanium dioxide, a chemical commonly used in toothpaste and cosmetics and that breaks down when reacting with light, supposedly killing the virus upon contact.
Shinto Hirata, vice director of merchandising at Haruyama, says the suit is proven to kill 40 per cent of the latest flu virus in about three hours and will retain its protective capability even after being washed several times.
"If a person with the flu virus coughs, it might get on someone else's suit and from there, another person might get infected," he said.
"We came up with this idea to protect all businessmen and their families."
Despite the new layer of protection, the suit seems fairly similar to others worn by Japanese white-collar workers. It comes in four colours and styles and costs around $590 (Rs 27,403).
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