OSHA Issues Respirator Guidance For Longterm Care Facilities


 

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has issued respiratory protection guidance for longterm care facilities. that focuses on the use of respirators, according to an article on the EHS Daily Advisor website.

The guidance also emphasizes a primary reliance upon engineering and administrative controls  consistent with good industrial hygiene practice and OSHA’s “hierarchy of controls.”

The industrial hygiene “hierarchy of controls” is a series of workplace safety and health interventions that begins with elimination of hazards, followed by substitution, then engineering controls, administrative controls (including work practices), and personal protective equipment (PPE).

OSHA says workers must wear respirators when when in close contact with a resident of a longterm care facility with suspected or confirmed coronavirus infection. Employees then must wear an N95 filtering facepiece respirator or equivalent or a higher-level respirator approved by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health .

Earlier this year, OSHA issued enforcement guidance allowing the decontamination and reuse of N95 respirators during the pandemic on a case-by-case basis. The interim guidance to the agency’s Compliance Safety and Health Officers (CSHO) allows the reuse, in certain circumstances, of filtering facepiece respirators (FFR) decontaminated using methods that have shown promise in limited research.

According to OSHA, employers should:

  • Make a good-faith effort to provide and ensure workers use the most appropriate respiratory protection available for expected workplace hazards;
  • Ensure decontamination is performed according to CDC guidance;
  • Ensure employees perform a user seal-check each time they don a respirator and not permit use of a respirator on which the user cannot perform a successful user seal-check;
  • Train employees to follow appropriate precautionary measures detailed in the CDC’s guidance before using a decontaminated FFR;
  • Train employees using decontaminated respirators to understand that if the structural and functional integrity of any part of the respirator is compromised, it should not be used for respiratory protection—an inability to achieve a successful user seal-check could be an indicator that the integrity of the respirator is compromised;
  • Visually inspect, or ensure that workers visually inspect, FFRs to determine if the structural and functional integrity of the respirators has been compromised—components such as the straps, nose bridge, and nose foam material may degrade over time or as a result of decontamination and affect the quality of the respirators’ fit and seal; and
  • Train employees on the procedures for properly donning and doffing respirators to prevent self-contamination.

Read the full EHS Daily Advisor article.

 



November 12, 2020


Topic Area: Infection Control


Recent Posts

Mattresses Require Strict Care to Prevent Spread of Infections

Poor cleaning and disinfection techniques contribute to the persistent contamination of patient mattresses.


Gardner Health Services Opens Alum Rock Health Center

The 10,080-square-foot facility provides essential medical, dental, mental and chiropractic services to the Mayfair and East San José neighborhoods.


The Children's Center of Hamden Reports Data Security Incident

The incident was detected on December 28, 2024.


Designing for Senior Care Communities Means Designing for Everyone

No spaces can be designed for just one person, designers need to think about everyone who will occupy the space.


Harlem Hospital Legionnaires' Outbreak Highlights Cooling Tower Risks

Seven deaths linked to the cooling towers underscore the need for stricter water system monitoring and preventive maintenance in healthcare settings.


 
 


FREE Newsletter Signup Form

News & Updates | Webcast Alerts
Building Technologies | & More!

 
 
 


All fields are required. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

 
 
 
 

Healthcare Facilities Today membership includes free email newsletters from our facility-industry brands.

Facebook   Twitter   LinkedIn   Posts

Copyright © 2023 TradePress. All rights reserved.