Journal
CLINICAL INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 69, Issue -, Pages S231-S240Publisher
OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/cid/ciz616
Keywords
personal protective equipment doffing; exposure assessment; doffing self-contamination; inhalational exposure; methods development
Categories
Funding
- Prevention Epicenters Program of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [1U54CK000447]
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Background. Fluorescent tracers are often used with ultraviolet lights to visibly identify healthcare worker self-contamination after doffing of personal protective equipment (PPE). This method has drawbacks, as it cannot detect pathogen-sized contaminants nor airborne contamination in subjects' breathing zones. Methods. A contamination detection/quantification method was developed using 2-mu m polystyrene latex spheres (PSLs) to investigate skin contamination (via swabbing) and potential inhalational exposure (via breathing zone air sampler). Porcine skin coupons were used to estimate the PSL swabbing recovery efficiency and limit of detection (LOD). A pilot study with 5 participants compared skin contamination levels detected via the PSL vs fluorescent tracer methods, while the air sampler quantified potential inhalational exposure to PSLs during doffing. Results. Average PSL skin swab recovery efficiency was 40% +/- 29% (LOD = 1 PSL/4 cm(2) of skin). In the pilot study, all subjects had PSL and fluorescent tracer skin contamination. Two subjects had simultaneously located contamination of both types on a wrist and hand. However, for all other subjects, the PSL method enabled detection of skin contamination that was not detectable by the fluorescent tracer method. Hands/wrists were more commonly contaminated than areas of the head/face (57% vs 23% of swabs with PSL detection, respectively). One subject had PSLs detected by the breathing zone air sampler. Conclusions. This study provides a well-characterized method that can be used to quantitate levels of skin and inhalational contact with simulant pathogen particles. The PSL method serves as a complement to the fluorescent tracer method to study PPE doffing self-contamination.
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