Affiliation:
1. Department of Medicine University of Maryland School of Medicine Baltimore Maryland USA
2. University of Maryland Medical Center Baltimore Maryland USA
3. Department of Epidemiology and Public Health University of Maryland School of Medicine Baltimore Maryland USA
4. Allegheny Health Network Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA
5. National Personal Protective Technology Laboratory, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundDisposable N95 respirator shortages during the COVID‐19 and 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemics highlighted the need for reusable alternatives, such as elastomeric half‐mask respirators (EHMRs). Two US medical organizations deployed reusable EHMRs during the COVID‐19 response. In addition to wipe‐based disinfection following patient care episodes expected per local policies at both organizations, postshift centralized cleaning and disinfection (C&D) was expected at one site (A), permitting shared‐pool EHMR use, and optional at the other (Site B), where EHMRs were issued to individuals. Using a survey, we evaluated disinfection practices reported by EHMR users and predictors of disinfection behaviors and perceptions.MethodsSurveys assessed EHMR disinfection practices, occupational characteristics, EHMR use frequency, training, and individual‐issue versus shared‐pool EHMR use.ResultsOf 1080 EHMR users completing the survey, 76% reported that they disinfect the EHMR after each patient encounter, which was the expected practice at both sites. Increasing EHMR use, recall of disinfection training, and work in intensive care or emergency settings significantly influenced higher reporting of this practice. 36% of respondents reported using centralized C&D, although reporting was higher at the site (A) where this was expected (53%). Confidence in cleanliness of the EHMR following centralized C&D was not influenced by individual versus shared‐pool EHMR issue.ConclusionsMost EHMR users reported adherence with expected post‐care individual‐based disinfection of EHMRs but did not necessarily use standardized, centralized C&D. Future efforts to limit reliance on behavior related to respirator disinfection may improve EHMR implementation in healthcare to avert dependence on single‐use, disposable N95 respirators.
Funder
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Cited by
2 articles.
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